My mother in law is on hospice, dying of pulmonary fibrosis. Her caregiver is her live in boyfriend, they own a home together but never married. He does not have a LPOA but has taken it upon himself to make medical decisions for her. He has told me that he refuses to give her morphine to control her shortness of breath because it is going to kill here. He thinks hospice speeds up the dying process. She has been having a lot of rough nights because that is when her breathing gets really bad. He will not give her anything in the comfort care pack hospice brought, he will not give her a breathing treatment with the nebulizer either. He told me the other day that he had told other family members he threw the meds away but that he really has them stored away in another room. I don’t know if any of that is true, last I saw the meds were in her fridge but that was over a week ago. I have suggested doing certain things and buying certain equipment to help make her more comfortable and life easier but he says no to everything. He has said they don’t need hospice. she is bedridden now and when the home health aid came this week it was discovered that she is covered in bed sores. I don’t think he is asking her anything or explaining anything to her. She is awake and mostly alert I really don’t know if hospice explained the comfort care pack to her and when to use it. He did say that he gave her a small drop of morphine and it “made her head explode”. He firmly believes that the morphine is there for no reason other than to kill her. It seems to me she is suffering because he will not treat her symptoms. She is on 16liters oxygen. Does this sound like elder abuse and should I report him? I am sorry if this posts twice, I tried posting this a minute ago and I don’t think it worked.
Just a comment on a restraining order; the bed sores might be a factor, as well as refusing to administer medicine (morphine) she needs, might be the basis for a health based injunction against him, to remove him from the home regardless of how it's titled.
I think it would the same principle police use to remove a wife batterer, which in some ways he is.
I'm not really sure how the survivor's rights come into play, but if he's abusing her, which I believe he is, I would think a criminal action would trump any of his rights just as it would in a battering situation. He may not be hitting her, but he's still an abuser.
Good luck; I wish you well.
I never considered that he might be hoarding the morphine, like I said I had seen the comfort care pack in the fridge 1-2 weeks ago and then the other day he said he told my BIL and SIL he threw it away. Based on everything he has said to me, he has me convinced he is trying to prolong her life. If he wanted her dead, he could have administered a fatal dose of morphine and no one would ever know.
I have not seen the bed sores, apparently they are on her tailbone. My husband was present when he told me this information. I believe it is illegal to record someone without their permission in CA but I have decided to keep a tape recorder on myself every time I am in his presence so I can record what he says. Because it is his word against mine and you are absolutely right, he is a smooth talker. It is my understanding that she wasn’t really receiving actual care from hospice until very recently. So I can’t say for sure that they dropped the ball. I think he has probably declined most of their help but now that MIL is bedridden, their help is necessary and that’s why the home health aid is coming 3 times a week.
With his former wife, he told me he pushed everyone away when she was dying-her family, his family even their 2 children. I expected him to try to do the same with MIL when we got the news she had PF and months left to live but he knows better, he knows her kids would not tolerate it, that he would never get away with it. He did tell me that When MIL passes it will be just him and her in the room, he doesn’t want spectators. But that’s ultimately not his decision although he can certainly arrange it by not telling us if and when she takes a turn for the worse.
I will you all updated! I am going to call the hospice social worker. I took down her name the other day, as well as the name of the case manager. I know they won’t give me any information so I plan to just call and state my concerns and ask how they can address it or what we need to do. Will also contact a friend at the police department to see if they will get involved or if we need to go through hospice and APS first. I suspect we would need a restraining order to get him out of the house. They co-own it, it’s paid but it’s been signed over to the living trust and he has survivors rights he can stay there until he dies and then it goes to his kids and MILs kids.
I would question only one thing though, and that's that you have no proof of what he's told you. I assume though that you've seen her, and seen the bedsores? And if I understand correctly, the Hospice staff confirmed this, or advised you? (I have trouble following long paragraphs w/o breaks, so I keep losing my place!).
My concern is that when (not "if") you call the police, that they see the abuse. It sounds like he is in fact a smooth talker, and I would be concerned about calling the police w/o evidence.
If you've seen enough evidence, then I would call the police now and get the ball rolling. But I'd also contact hospice and advise them that the police have been contacted, and that they should have reported the bedsore situation as neglect and/or abuse. I think they haven't performed their duties as well as they should have, i.e., they screwed up.
I'm a bit concerned that the police might turn to you and ask why this situation hasn't been reported before, so be prepared to address that.
With someone who needs 16 L of oxygen, I honestly don't know how she's managed to survive thus far. And given that need as well as his arrogant assumption of his apparently superior (in his mind) knowledge, I expect he wouldn't take her to the hospital when that need increases. This poor woman needs intervention now to ease her remaining days, especially with all the bedsores.
She needs to be out of there ASAP.
Given that this is the second time he's meddled in someone's life, and that his first wife's death certificate shows suicide, and that he's been investigated before, I think I would consider him a black widow live-in BF.
This man's unauthorized takeover of her, w/o any legal authority, his lack of proper care, his former wife's abuse - these actions make me wonder if in fact he's a serial killer. Perhaps I'm being overly dramatic, but something is obviously wrong with someone who behaves in the manner he's demonstrated.
And at this point I would suppress any concern about your husband's stress in learning about the situation in the middle of the week. He needs to know, and ASAP. But don't blame yourself for not raising the issue; you've done so now.
I think you might raise the issue with the police though of asking about the status of her financial accounts. It wouldn't surprise me if he's forged documents to take over what funds she has.
Please let us know what happens after the police remove her, AND advise the hospital to prevent him from seeing her. He absolutely needs to be denied any further access, and the locks needs to be changed ASAP. He can always remove his belongings with presence of the police and/or sheriff.
Report that.
Then, take a step back, a safe distance.
Or, just have him transport his Mother to the hospital, making your complaints there.
Follow Veronica's advice.
Your hubby may have a stressful job but this is his mother and she choose him to be her DPOA not her boyfriend. She has vocalized that she is tired of this life so nothing should be done to prolong it. Does she have a DNR ( Do not resuscitate order) if not make hubby get one ASAP because if she collapses BF will call 911 and they will do everything to save her.
The only rights BF has as I see it is his rights to his share of the house.
Do you actually believe everything he is telling you? Putting suicide on a death certificate sounds very fishy, many people stop taking treatment when they have had enough but it is not considered suicide unless they take a deliberate action like an overdose , shooting themselves or deliberately driving into a tree that kind of thing. Just deciding to stop chemo or dialysis is not suicide.
But that is water under the bridge and none of your business but MIL is your family business so push hubby and his siblings to get MIL out of this man's care
One last thought is there money involed here? That is hers that will dry up once she dies. You are doing the right things. Let us know what happens.
Call Hospice immediately and raise hell with the nursing supervisor.
If they don't rush out immediately and remove her from this situation call Elder abuse. Failing all that call 911 and get her to the nearest ER. Unless Mom has given BF PoA he has no rights in this matter so get over there and take charge. If he refuses to let you in immediately call the police.
This is an extremely serious matter and Mom will be in great pain from the bed sores and distress from shortness of breath. Get your shoes on and do it NOW
it could well be that Mom is allergic to morphine, some people are but there are other drugs that can be tried.
What you’re describing is elder abuse. The hospice people need to know what’s going on.
That may mean that you bring her away from the BF to a Skilled Nursing facility/hospice near you in order to let her die peacefully.
We don’t even treat dogs the way he is treating her.😫