She's in a full-time care facility and continually asks us to get her a phone. When she had a landline in the hospital, she called all hours. She was eventually moved to a facility with no phone line, and my sister-in-law got her a cell phone. She'd burn through the minutes in a day calling random numbers because she can't remember how to use the phone. I gave the phone back to my SIL because of the frustration it was causing my MIL. She would always think the phone was broken and it was out of minutes, nothing but random numbers that she had called (she forgets where she has put the laminated cards I made her with our names and phone numbers on each card). Now, she is insistant on getting a cell phone because _____. (Fill in the blank because it's something different each time.) She needs a phone because they're beating her up, someone came and had a gun, someone was trying to kidnap her, someone was stealing her stuff, etc. Reasoning does no good. I tell her I'm working on it, but she's persistent. I just don't know how to handle this. I was her caregiver before the police had to break into her home and we found her unresponsive and hours from death. She trusts me and I don't want to break that trust. I'm just at a loss.
Best of luck, lots of good advice here.
Bob
You can program the numbers and the only people she can call are the pictures
Excellent post:
You wrote: [ "The fact that she is persistent about this and doesn't seem to forget about it from one visit to the next indicates to me that she must have some lucidity and be present often during the day.
With that in mind, if the problem is how often she calls and how many people she calls for no real reason and at all times of the day and night, would just having the ability to use a phone passify her?
Would a realistic toy phone be enough? " ]
Lymie61
I agree with all your points. I also have question marks about whether a toy phone would be the solution.
If she has some lucidity, this is infantalizing the poor woman and it is a form of abuse.
The Amazon show phone sounds like the perfect solution.
All she needs is family members that are tech savvy enough to set it up.
Again, your post is both intelligent and sensitive.
You mention she wants a cell phone, at least I think it was OP... is the type, cell or landline an issue? If the facility doesn't have landline access the VOIP idea is a great way around that. If she is insisting on cell the spotty or lack of service/reception there at the facility is a good excuse. You might need to have "issues" when you get or make calls from your cell on occasion and if she says so and so seems to use theirs fine you can always explain it's a different carrier and it's far too expensive to get service just for her (you would add a phone to yours for her) or switch your plan. Maybe yours is the only one that works at your house or somewhere else you need to have a phone. If you do set something up for her maybe calling her or letting her call get through to you every so often when convenient would be a good thing just having these other things in place so it's on your terms and not her delusions. I don't know if it has any place for your situation but we have an Amazon Echo Show set up at my mom's and it has been great! It has a screen and facilitates video calls basically but she doesn't have to do anything to answer it or call us (if she could say the words, she can't) and we wouldn't need to either if we had one of the Echo devices (we use our phones), it really is just like "dropping in" on her for a visit. She loves it too, we were a bit concerned that once she understood that it kind of takes away some of her privacy she might not be so wild about it but given your mom is in a facility that may not even be as much of a consideration. There are ways to not accept the drop in so you are covered at home should you set this up so your mom can drop in on you too. You can even set hours and set different hours for different people but I'm getting away from the basics, only the people you approve have access to you and maybe seeing you more often or feeling like she has that access to you, she can kind of be a part of your household again, without you having to go in for a visit would help some of her fears and need to have contact with you. I know it's all part of the disease process and their minds deteriorating but I often think that part of this type of behavior is rooted in the separation, change of surroundings and lack of control over where they are, what they can do and who is caring for them. When they have a delusion maybe being able to see a loved one they trust and talk it through with them at that moment would help to bring them back to present or at least not be as scared. Maybe having the ability to see you and or be "around" while you make dinner will help them feel more in control and less left out for lack of a better explanation. I know it isn't going to eliminate it all but perhaps it can help, I know it helps me to know I can check in on mom visually when I can't get her on the phone or am concerned for some other reason. Maybe telling your mom you can check in while shes sleeping to catch any thief or night visitors will help her fear. We set up the Show in Mom's hospital room last time she was there and it not only allowed us to be there when doctors came around but she really liked just knowing I was there, I just left the link open while she fell asleep or we watched TV together, she didn't need to talk or visit just the feeling I was there. Maybe just knowing she has a connection to the outside world would help ease your mom's need for a phone. Who knows maybe being able to pop in and check on the dog home alone while your at work would give her enough purpose and chore to not be board which I think can also play a part in these phone call obsessions. Good luck!
He is in a nursing home now with dx of vascular dementia. We did not take his cell phone as he couldn’t figure it out. He has a phone in his room, but he can’t figure it out either. He insists he has to dial 6, my sister even showed him it worked by just dialing the number. But he argued with her, got nasty about it, so we just told him to ask the staff to dial the numbers for him. When he dials he is also transposing or adding numbers.
We just stopped talking about it, and just said to ask the staff to dial the phone for him. We just keep telling him how helpful the staff is, and they want him to be happy.
In a three week span of time, he seems to have forgotten about having a cell phone.
To add, if your mother is totally incompetent and this has been verified.....then then the toy phone and play money may suffice, without exposing you to undue influence charges down the road.
If you mother has not been declared incompetent and is only partially impaired with moments of lucidity, you will be exposing yourself to undue influence charges by withholding the phone.
This is an excellent idea as are the ideas for the phone with child controls.
There are some caregivers who refuse a phone to an elderly person as a way to exert control and prevent them from calling other family members.
Also, if a person has POA, the fact that you refused your mother a phone, can cause a case for undue influence and self-dealing to be brought against the POA.
Use her money to pay for any stray phone calls. But, again, if you use the child controls you can control the numbers she is able to dial.
People with Alzheimers or dementia do often have moments of lucidity.
It seems odd that someone would want to deny their parent the ability to reach out to other family members, when a child control phone is available to limit charges.