Follow
Share

He let a stranger in the house tonight. Luckily it was a neighbor, but he didn’t know that. He called her by my name & didn’t seem to know who I was for a few minutes. He also leaves doors unlocked & sometimes wide open at night. We live on a very busy road & I am concerned about our safety. I don’t know what to do. I don’t want to put him in a facility, but I have had heart & pulmonary embolism surgeries in the last 6 months. I have coped with the many things that come with his conditions but now I don’t feel safe in my own home. I am @ wit’s end.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Thanks again 4 all your kind input. I am going 2 start looking @ facilities next week. It is so nice 2 get opinions from people that have gone through similar problems. This was my first post but it won’t be my last. This community is obviously kind & willing 2 help.
thank you again & I’ll be praying for all of us in this same “boat” together!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I used to be a 911 Dispatcher. There was a woman with early onset dementia in the next city. She lived with one of her married children. This woman would sneak out at night and go on long walks. Many a night she'd wind up at our PD at 2 or 3 a.m. Usually an Officer would spot her, or someone would see her and call us. Sometimes she'd just show up at the back door of the Police Dept. in the middle of the night. Somehow she knew there was safety there, and she'd show up by herself.

We'd make arrangements with her family to come pick her up. (again.)
Of course, the neighboring Law Enforcement agency was notified, APS was involved, Social Workers, her family etc. But, the woman kept going on her walks from time to time...

I was working one night and she showed up by herself at our back door. She was staggering. Something was wrong.
We sent an Officer to the door immediately to bring her in. She had been severely beaten. Very severely. Someone had attacked her while she was out walking. There were a lot of strong-arm robberies in the area back then. A mentally disabled lady wandering thru L.A. at 3 am? Nothing good will happen, that's for sure.

We called for Paramedics and they took her to the Hospital. She was never able to say what happened and we never found out what happened. We never saw her again. She went from the Hospital into a facility where she could finally be safe at night.

(Of course APS was involved again that night, as they were each time.) When I asked the Officer who took the report about it - he was very upset and said she couldn't describe who did this to her, or even exactly what street it happened on - and they were never able to solve the case.

This could have been avoided if her family had placed her when she began wandering during the night.
My point is - this is a MAJOR safety issue! Wandering at night can mean falls, attacks, drowning, being hit by a car. And the list goes on and on.

Where I live now, there's lots of retired people. Every few months one with dementia goes wandering late at night. We hear the helicopters looking for them. Usually they are found. But, not always!! Sometimes lost in the woods until they die. Sometimes never to be found again. Where did they go??? What happened to them??? nobody knows.

Someone that wanders at night needs safety, and that means a facility.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Neither you nor your husband are safe at home. If you die from all this stress or he lets the wrong person in the house, what will happen to him?

It is not cruel, careless, unloving, or dismissive to place him where he can be safe 24/7. It may be worst for you (because it’s definitely saddening and so, so hard!), but the best for him.
Keeping him at home is not helping; it’s hurting both of you.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

This isn’t a safe living environment for either of you and both of you need and deserve to be safe and cared for, both of you as you matter too. I know this must be impossibly sad and hard, but please look out for you both and find a memory care setting for husband. Be his well rested advocate, not his anxious wife. I wish you peace
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

When my Husband was diagnosed with Alzheimer's and I suspect he also had Vascular Dementia I said I would keep him home as long as it was safe for HIM for me to care for him at home and as long as it was safe for ME to care for him.
I also dealt with wandering. I deadbolted doors and wore keys around my neck for YEARS, I replaced the touch pad to open the garage door (the up and down touch pad) and replaced it with a pad where you key in a code. I wore my car keys on my belt loop. I cable tied my furniture together so he could not drag something over to the gate and climb over it. All of this and he still managed to "escape" a few times. Once being found 13 hours later in the next state.
Luckily I was able to keep him at home because each of his declines put a stop to the current method of escape. (I don't know if you want to call the declines lucky though...)
Anyway you can see that try as you might not all methods will thwart someone that puts their mind to something.
Honestly I think it is time you begin looking for a Memory Care facility for your husband. And I do not say that easily.
But it is no longer safe for HIM to be at home. With the escapes and the busy road you describe.
I think it is no longer safe for YOU. If he is letting people into the house not "knowing" who they are that can put both of you in danger.
You said it yourself..."I no longer feel safe in my own home"

Placing someone in a facility where they will be safe and cared for is not you giving up, not a failure. It is coming to the realization that their care is beyond what you can safely do at home.

If your husband is a Veteran and he is not yet in the VA system contact the local Veterans Assistance Commission and they can get him started and if he has what is called a "service connected disability" a % will be calculated and that may be enough to help a bit.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

You may feel better about residential care if you actually read about what’s available locally and visit some and get a look at the evaluation reports about them.

Hopefully, by doing this you will find that you have options that you hadn’t considered.

My LO was content and functioned well during a week long emergency visit to my home, but I knew that her needs would require 110% commitment to her care, and because I also cared for a special needs child, I was not in a position to offer to assume for her care in addition to his.

If his safety and your welfare depend on the kind of care you’ve describe, and the kind of risk behavior he’s demonstrated previously, you need to broaden the possibilities available to him outside your home.

Please make your decisions based on the best choices for both him and you. You may have to put his safety before his happiness, but that’s ok.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

My aunt didn't want to put Uncle in a facility. She didn't think anyone could care for him the way she did.

We didn't know he was beating her black and blue every day to get the key she wore around her neck to keep him from getting out to "go for a stroll" along the highway.

When this was discovered, he went to Memory Care. He was happy as a clam. Was able to go outside on the locked grounds whenever he pleased to 'stroll'.

Aunt dropped dead of a massive heart attack shortly after his placement. Most likely from the stress of caring for him.

Uncle happily for several more years in Memory Care.

Just one metric to consider.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

It is no longer about "Wants" it is about "Needs", He needs to be placed in MC which will include lockdown.

You need to take this burden off your back, he is beyond the stage of you being able to care for him, what if you die? Then what, someone has to scramble around to find a place for him to be cared for?

You deserve a quality of life as well.

Sending support your way.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Cry4help Mar 2023
Thank you for your input. I know that no one wants to do this & I am struggling but your answer gave me some clarity. Thanks again.
(1)
Report
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter