My dad has short term memory loss, lives alone, and smokes. He is a heavy smoker 1/2 to 3/4 pack per day.
My family and I think that he smokes for two reasons 1. He is addicted. 2. He is bored and this helps pass the time.
Due to the high cost, we are looking for a way to slow dad down a bit. We have been looking for a device like the automatic pill dispensers that we can load his cigarettes into and control remotely (app + wi-fi) how many cigarettes (per hour/day) that can be dispensed. So far we have not found anything like this but we feel that there has to be a device out there that could work.
Thanks for any help
If he can afford to smoke then I would leave it alone. Of course it is addicting, that has been proven, the challenge is that the addition is because it causes serotonin production and that is our feel good hormone. What will you replace the cigarettes with? You can't take something that provides pleasure away without filling the void you will be creating.
Sometimes we have to let people do what they can afford to do, whether we agree or not. Buying cartons of cigarettes is the cheapest way to purchase them. Seriously consider how to let dad retain his autonomy as long as possible and do the things that he enjoys, to soon he will not have any choices so let him have them while he is still able.
If you feel that your father is safe to live alone despite his memory loss, really you have no control over his smoking. He isn't a cat with a food-dispenser dish. He is a person who is making a choice (a dangerous one) to smoke.
Many of us make choices that aren't necessarily good for us. I love Popeye's chicken and Whoppers. Woe the person who takes them out of my cold dead hand.
And about the smoking, I also remember the addiction. I stopped about 1,000 times before I stopped for good many decades ago. In the end this is your father's choice. Speak to him about your worries. (What are your worries? An earlier death? A more torturous death? A fire? All of the above?)
Listen to him.
My parents both smoked unfiltered cigarettes into their 80s, then quit for their own reasons. But it was by their own choice. It never would have occurred to me to tell them they cannot smoke, nor to suggest the 5 p.m. cocktail hour was over. Not my place.
Truly, at the end of life everything is taken from us one thing at a time. We should be allowed to make our own decisions for our own lives in so far as it is safe to do so.
What does your father say to you when you speak to him about limiting his smoking?
I leave him the cigs and he does not remember our conversation.
If he could smoke two less cigs per day that would be great in making them last longer.
I've seen these websites selling $25 cartons of cigs, but I am leary of buying from them for all sorts of reasons.
As for the cost...can you write a number on the filters of each cigarette, like "1 of 10", "2 of 10"... up to "10 of 10 LAST ONE" ? This *may* help get around the memory issue, but maybe not. Again, there's only so much energy you should realistically be putting towards this.
My son is a smoker and lived with us until recently. When it was "time'" for him to have a cigarette he would turn from Mr. Jekyll into Monster Hyde and I'd insist I couldn't continue talking to him until he had a ciggy break. I hate that that was a thing, but it was reality. He has to want to quit on his own and I think your dad is beyond this hope.
I took him to the ER one evening. He was saying that he needed to smoke.
I asked him to please wait until he spoke with the doctor and be treated and later he could light up when we left the hospital.
I left for a brief moment to use the restroom. I came back to the waiting area in the ER separated by curtains only to find my brother smoking a cigarette in the hospital!
I had to threaten to leave before he put it out, even then he was screaming to me, “One or two more drags off of it, then I am done!” Grrrrrrrrrr!!!
I was freaking out. People were near us with oxygen tanks!
Oh my gosh, sometimes I look back and say, I don’t know how I survived.
I really loved my brother but I was also a complete fool to care for him.
Or I was completely brainwashed and programmed for a long time to be a caregiver to a very stubborn man!
He had two sides. The other side was very compassionate and caring that would invite homeless people to sleep in his apartment on cold winter nights.
Maybe it was a combo of all of them!
I learned to immediately ask for a nicotine patch for him.
I wish you all the best as you tackle this difficult problem. I feel for smokers. It tough to kick!
I also feel for you because I know that it’s hard as the family member to watch them battle this addiction.
Let him alone. My mother is 94 with dementia. She loves her snacks & sweets & is overweight as a result. Who cares? Now is no time to put her on a diet or worry about her cholesterol either, you know? The last thing I want to do is prolong her life in THIS condition!
Wishing you the best of luck accepting your father as he is.
It's the repetition of the behavior. As a test, I once gave him 100 cigs and he smoked them all in 6 days. I really think that was because there were simply that many (100) in front of him so in his mind, he thought he had to smoke them.
He also has a sweet tooth and loves cookies, cakes, ice cream you name it. The same behavior stands with the sweets and we have to rebuy him the same items each trip to the grocery store.
Thanks for wishing us luck.
Also, there have been many times that he has lost packs and then falsely reports that he is out of cigs, so I have to make an emergency trip to refill, but when I go over and look around, I sometimes find open packs laying around with cigs still in them.
Due to his forgetfulness, we got him a HERO pill dispenser. This is the best thing and I can control it via an app on my phone. That machine and the cameras have given us peace of mind.
There has to be some device that can dispense a certain amount of cigs.
Anyway, most of the servicemen smoked in their day.
If you were fighting in a world war and smoking calmed your nerves, you might smoke too!
My dad picked up smoking in the service. I believe all of his brothers did as well.
My dad quit because mom didn’t smoke and did not want him smoking in the house around us.
Anyway, my uncle was a bachelor and continued smoking.
He had his larynx removed. Guess what? He still smoked!
My mom and dad said, “What is the point of him quitting now?” He’s dying.
No one said a word to him about quitting or about his smoking.
It was fashionable in their day to smoke.
They had the fancy cigarette cases and lighters.
It was all over television. Lucy and Ricky, many others, on the big screen too, Bette Davis!
My godfather smoked a pipe.
With the memory loss, he could lay one down or leave it burning and it falls out of the ashtray. Does he have a covered porch where he can smoke? If so, split the packs of cigarettes into packs of only 10 cigarettes to start and put them on the porch. Don't leave other packs where he can see them, It's possible he will see there aren't many in the pack and try to space it out more. See if you can convince him about how the house smells like a cigarette and the danger to see if you can get him going outside to smoke.
It's a hard habit to break and even harder if someone is trying to make you stop...makes you want to smoke more. Like telling someone they can't have the ice cream because of weight. You sit and think about the ice cream.
On the other hand, depending on his age, he may have smoked for many years and has no desire to reduce/quit. With the memory issue, he may reach a point where he forgets how often he was accustomed to smoking. It is his money. If it's not causing him to do without other things, so be it. If there is a money issue, they make some cheap ones. Put a similar cheaper brand into his packages and let him smoke.
If only I could limit him to like 10 cigs per day that would be great and allow me to get there to refill without him running out.
My dear departed BIL chain smoked , one right after the other for the last 3-4 years of his life because he was bored. He was a wood worker and made beautiful things, but a series of small strokes put an end to that. Perhaps you could find a hobby for him to take his mind off smoking, thereby making his "stash" of cigarettes last longer.
Hugs to you.
I would suggest if you use something like this - watch him to see if there are certain times he smokes a little more than others. Like just after breakfast, lunch, supper (smokers tend to enjoy smoking after a meal). If he naps during the afternoon, say, give a bigger gap in the time. Set it up like smoke breaks at work. A couple of cigs 7.30 or 8, then 1 at 10 for smoke break time, a couple at lunch, 1 mid afternoon (unless he naps then), divide the remaining 4 cigs from about 5 to bedtime.
Just breaking the habit of sitting in a chair and having them sitting right next to him can help to retrain the brain of constantly reaching for one. He would have to get up out of the chair and go to kitchen or across the room to see if it's time for the machine to give him a cigarette. Good luck on this.
I had been keeping a carton of cigarettes at her house at all times, but decided to start doling out a pack at a time. It helped I lived next door, and controlled her purchasing. She came over once and said she was out, and I said we would get some later. Over a short period of time, she forgot about smoking. There were a few times, she tried to walk to a store to get them, but didn't know where to go. And there were a few times, she would walk around our condo and try to bum them. But eventually she forgot.
It is not an issue of enjoyment. It is an issue of safety! Do what you can to get your dad to quit before he burns himself or something else.
He can try a patch, Nicotine Gum to chew, ect.
If he doesn't have the money to buy them, let him know he can't afford them..
Who buys him his cigarettes?
If he doesn't buy them himself then buy just a certain amount and that will have to last him.
Best to try and get him to at least try to stop smoking.
Renemies he likes and enjoyed smoking ling before he was bored.
He smokes because he likes it, it's a habit but, by now, he is totally addicted to the Nicotine.
Try getting him started on several hobbies.
Paint by number,
Puzzles
Reating Material
Easy Kids crafts
like Model Cars. Planes, ect that you build and paint.
Crossford Puzzles
Hand held Black Jack Game you play by yourself.
Does he have a computer that he can occupy his time?
One last thing, if your Dad can afford his cigarettes and he wants to continue to smoke, remember that his his business and you should respect that and let him live out the rest of his life doing exactly what he wants to do.
If you're concerned with his safety, you might see if he would allow you to put up a Camera in at least the main room where the TV is or where he is most of the time so you can kero tabs on him 24 7.
I had the Nest Cameras installed at my Dads. They are great and installs easy enough.
Prayers
I have tried leaving a certain quantity, but he has no ‘filter’ ( pardon the smoking pun!) you can leave two packs,or ten packs... he cannot gauge the supply, he will just smoke the lot then call up, anytime of the day or night, for more. He has no concept of the cost, and refuses to accept reminders or refusals to bring more. If you try to remain him you just delivered some, he simply denies it. If he doesn’t get them he creates absolute mayhem, faking emergencies, and telling everyone how cruel I am. It’s been, and continues to be a nightmare. I too have tried to source some form of slow release ‘safe’ but to no avail and I suspect that were there something like that, he would no doubt find a way of forcing it open, and it would be unlikely to have enough compartments to allow me a few days ‘off’ cigar duty anyway.
I used to make sure he always had at least £50-£100 in his wallet so should an emergency occur, or I was unable to get to him for a few days, he would at least have the funds to get himself to hospital, or have a neighbour buy him essential supplies... but because he just calls up an unscrupulous cab company to pick them up for him, I have now resorted to concealing cash about his apartment, easily accessible should he or someone need to access it. I have also had fun and games hiding packs of cigars about the place, like some messed up party game, in the hope I might gain the occasional day off...to no avail. He will turn the place upside and I know the repercussions only fall to me to tidy up, or sort out.
Were it not for the horrendous cost, I would have no problem with his smoking himself into oblivion, but it’s just not that simple...
they say to remove yourself from toxic relationships, but how can you when you’re the only person who is providing all needs to someone who is both so frail, and yet so selfish & cunnng at the same time. Nobody really understands the real damage of this cycle.
I tried to get my husband to quit also but, he drove a truck and came home every day smelling of smoke. He swore he quit but, his moustach was yellow. When he found out I have a lung dying he went on vapes because I flat refused smoking in the house and he didn't want to go outside. At first, he had so much nicotine oil in the "juice" that is what they steam that, I had problems with the cloud of smoke. It followed me no matter where I sat or walked to in the house. He got to the point he was emptying out a large bottle a week. Each fill from the container into the tank of the vape equaled a carton and it was being filled 2 or more times a day!
I finally decided to "help" him cut down. Every time he brought a new bottle of the juice home, I would wait until he was sound asleep and empty half of it down the drain and refill with water. He never knew it. I also got an air filter machine that is right beside his recliner that he has to listen to when he uses the vape. I can breathe now which is good because the NP has diagnosed me with COPD. He cut back the nicotine and finally the juice is nicotine free and only a bit of liquid taste oil in water. He is hooked on a strawberry/grape combo. I can tolerate it. But the habit of reaching for that crutch is still there. Even when we are in my car where he is not going to be smoking, I see him reach for his pocket every 1 to 2 minutes. It is the habit now since he is off of the nicotine.
Your father is addicted to nicotine just like a drug addict is to their drugs. He can be weaned off but, it isn't pleasant. You might try the vape and gradually lower the nicotine amount in each bottle of juice. They do have cigar taste oils to add to the bottle.
Good luck to you.
Later on though, he bought cigarettes.
Is a pipe more economical? My godfather always smoked a pipe.
I fill it up during my once-a-week grocery delivery visit. At first, the machine would be empty to nearly empty after the 7 days, but now when I go to fill it up there are lots of cigarettes still in there. It seems to have worked out well.
Dad has slowed down his smoking a bit and stopped hoarding and hiding cigarettes all around his apartment. The best thing is that I am no longer getting those EMERGENCY calls during the week to bring him more cigarettes.
I hope this can help someone who was in my shoes.