No diagnosis. Beginning to question my sanity here. In telephone conversations she shifts from topic to topic and I get confused. yes me! I can't follow it. She can, in the same converstion, say two opposite things.
Example: I am going home from hospital tomorrow. (she really is in the hospital now) and then two seconds later, says I am going home today.
Does misplace things and thinks that the woman who comes in is putting them in different places. Who knows?
She bought 10 disposable gloves. I explained she would get five uses out of them. She had trouble comprehending this. Then got it
Says I am lying or that I am accusing her of lying. This is not so. Cannot convince her of this.
I hate even putting this out there. Family doesn't see it. They say it is just her nerves. Is it? Or they say: well, she is old and it is normal in old age.
Thank you.
caretaking service but have done your research and would like to take some of
the stress off of him. the patient will always fight you no matter what but you both need to do the best by mom. they're caretaking agencies and group therapies youn both should consider. you'll meet others in the same situation and they can provide info but most importantly support. take care, sorry this is so long kathy
The person who is around them the most will notice the weird stuff. I plan to go on a trip and let siblings take over for a while - they will be singing a new tune then.
When my Mom returned from a short hospital stay due to a fall I hired caregivers to help give her a break from all the daily chores... after 3 days she wasn't having any more of that, and she asked the caregivers to leave.... [sigh]. I said ok because I thought she was still of clean mind.
Another fall happened, this time very serious, and I finally felt comfortable enough to snoop around my parents house. I was surprised to find past-due bills, and other strange things that indicated my Mom wasn't thinking clearly. Boy, she had me fooled.
When my mother began acting loopy, but very gradually, my brothers & I could see it coming but we were all stymied as to how to handle the situation. She wasn't far enough gone for us to have her declared incompetent, but she managed to blow her finances to hell. We had no authority to intervene. As Sunnygirl stated in different words, it is very difficult for grown children to swap roles with their parents and become the ones making the judgment calls. It just ain't natural!
Anyway. This is a link to a learned article but one with good, practical recommendations once you get past the Doctor-ese language: hindawi/journals/crp/2012/595821/ It explains how improving your mother's lifestyle and support at home will improve her health, her heart function (possibly) and therefore her mental state, for example - aiming for a virtuous circle. Please, please don't go looking for miracles; I'm just hoping it will point your brother in the right direction. The better your mother's heart failure is controlled, and the better the support she has in daily life, the easier it will be for her to manage mentally too.
The Alzheimers Society supports people living with all kinds of dementia, not just Alzheimer's Disease; so that might be a good place to look.
The American Heart Association at www.heart.org has articles about cognitive impairment and vascular dementia. One point that comes up immediately is that mobility and exercise are important to brain function. I expect that's why your mother's hospital team are leaning towards protecting your mother's sense of balance by not giving her anxiolytics - that is, because they are trying to keep her mobile as far as possible. Everything's a trade off, they're not ignoring her mental state, they're just prioritising her physical one.
You're not supposed to feel hurt? That your lovely mother is ill and suffering? Er - yes you are! Of course you do. Being strong doesn't mean not being upset. Be kind to yourself, too.
YES. I do get this. My posts must sound scattered. I know I am already grieving.
Thanks again.
Read your post and it made me cry. May God bless you for your kindness. Yes, "bucketfulls" and to Keep loving her no matter what. Yes. I will and I will listen to her no matter what. I am imperfect and I have been angry and frustrated at times. I will try harder. As to not telling her, she does not want to know. She always said so. And, often, she would ask me "what is wrong with me", and when I would start by saying "your heart", she would stop me. She is again in the hospital and someone there told her her heart is "very bad". She went into such agitation and her heart rate was uncontrollable. that no Ativan at any dose could stop it. I know they love her. My brother is 50, healthy and his perspective is that my mother needs to be "cheered up" by us and that we need to "change the subject" when she tells us that she is hurting, in pain, whatever. He sent an email to EVERYONE in the family about this .. her personal issue with depression and how she talks about all she has been through. I feel that YES, of course, she is. She is grieving so many losses and she is suffering. I wanted to email him privately and tell him that he should not email everyone about her personal issues or call her a liar because she is NOT lying. She is possibly in early dementia. I am not a doctor. I had suspected the vascular thing, but did not know that it goes hand in hand with CHF.. Can you point me to a resource regarding the relationship between the two? Perhaps THEN, he might see. Thank you for validating my feelings as no one else is seeing what I see, but then, they do not talk to her daily like I do and she told me, in confidence, that I am the only one she can talk to. Yesterday, she was "back" and said "I love you dearly with all my heart". I'm sorry if this post is not upbeat.
What in the blazes was the thinking behind not telling your mother about her heart condition? Whatever happened to informed consent? However. There it is.
Your not wanting your mother to suffer and not wanting her to die makes perfect sense to me. Exactly so. I wanted my mother to get better. I wanted her to have a chance to recover. I knew very well that these ideas were unicorns, but that's what I *wanted.* Knowing that something is impossible, having wants that are even mutually exclusive, may not be rational but then we're talking about your emotions. Rational don't come into it.
You must feel very frustrated with your family's approach, I should think. I don't know if this will help, but however haphazard and shambolic their way of going about things is, you could keep in mind that even if everyone was all-knowing and efficient and lovely, they still wouldn't have the perfect answers. So the difference it makes is less than it feels. I don't know what's the matter with me this morning, I'm all over the place, but I hope you know what I'm getting at: your mother isn't missing out on a perfect answer that would solve all her problems, because there isn't one. The surrounding muddle is hard enough to cope with but at least you don't need to fear that it could be making a material difference to the outcome, which I hope is some comfort.
But meanwhile what you're going through is a horrible experience. Typically, in late stage CHF, micro strokes caused by compromised blood supply to the brain create the piecemeal disintegration that you seem to be looking at. Depression, anger, loss of inhibition could all be part of that picture; so could loss of balance; the not being able to make the simple calculation about the gloves, again, that fits. Finding the right combination of therapies is incredibly difficult, and especially so if there isn't a family and medical team consensus on what the key priorities are. At this point, given what you've said about the wider family's feelings, I wouldn't be very optimistic about arriving at one, either. For your own sake, it might be better to step back from that and let them do things in their own way, rather than try to take charge. Suggest practical ideas by all means, help where you can, but your mother put your brother in charge, that's not your fault, and I doubt if challenging it now is worth the battle. It's a great pity that there wasn't more preparation and teamwork established earlier on; but then it's wholly understandable. We only get one shot at handling this situation, where we're supporting our parents towards the end of their lives: how can we possibly be expected to get it all right?
Towards the end of her life, in the last months, my medically qualified daughter shifted her approach to her adored granny. She stopped contributing nudges and suggestions to the medical team (she'd made two highly effective interventions earlier on), and instead kept to two main themes: commiseration with anything that was bothering my mother, and exuberant love and approval. Maybe the best thing you can do for yourself and your mother is keep giving back the love she always gave you in bucketfuls, just as you are doing, in spite of the times when she rebuffs you or acts out. She isn't herself, but you can be yourself. Hugs to you, please keep posting.
I would consult with an attorney who regularly goes to court in these types of cases. They know what the courts look at and what proof you need.
If your mom has been taken to the ER twice due to improper medication administration, then I would be very concerned. It's not even a close call when it's that severe, IMO.
Frequent falls can be related to mobility issues, but they also often accompany Vascular Dementia. My loved one had many falls and fractures and that's one of the major things that indicated she was in trouble. The reason is that VD causes severe balance issues. They can tip over for no apparent reason. AND the judgment leaves and they think they don't need a walker or that they are able to go up and down steps alone. Their judgment leaves them and they take unnecessary risks.
Since your brother is POA and he is being secretive and not advocating for her care, I might question why. Is there some financial bias? Would she be a self pay person at an Assisted Living or nursing home facility? I would consider his motivation of non-action. Do other family members agree with you? It bothers me that your mom is afraid of him. That is concerning.
I would consult with an attorney who regularly handles Incompetency/Guardianship cases in your county. I would find out about the process, the proof needed, etc. That way you know what you would have to prove to file and get guardianship. That would trump over the POA and the guardian would then make the decisions if mom is deemed incompetent. If you nor anyone else in the family wants to do it, the court can appoint a third party who has been pre-approved by the courts to be the guardian. They would decide where mom lives and the care she gets.
It could cause a lot of hard feelings and discord in the family, but it is one option to attempt to protect your mom when no one else will. I wish you the best. Please post how things go.
Thanks to all.
I would keep watch and check on things she reports. Verify her contentions for her own safety. Confirm she follows up with medical care, medication, paying bills and that she isn't eating spoiled food, wanders or gives away her savings.
I would make sure you have her Durable POA, Healthcare POA and Living Will so you can act on her behalf down the road.
I have heard some people talk about VERY apparent dementia behavior in their loved ones and they are in complete denial. I think some people tell themselves anything to put off accepting dementia in their loved one. Sadly, it may take a crisis to get their attention.
You're only mentioning hospital behavior. Could be the temporary effects of whatever put her there...or her medications may have been changed. I've found meds are almost ALWAYS changed when one is hospitalized.
If you are the only one noticing it, maybe you are being unnecessarily hyper-vigilant. Sounds like you live a distance away. Hopefully the other family who DOESNT notice it sees her in person.
Stay alert. Keep mentioning your concerns...document them so you don't forget them. In the end, unless you can convince whoever that she should be evaluated, you may have to not-so-patiently wait for her symptoms to begin to obviously interfere with her everyday life.
You don't say how old she is, but just being in the hospital causes profound disorientation among most elders. So that might be a factor.
Are you her medical poa, or have a signed HIPAA form so that you can speak with her doctors about your concerns?
Have you spoken to the discharge planners at the hospital? Are you in agreement with her coming directly home, to be cared for by you, or has a rehab center been mentioned to get her back on her feet?
In terms of diagnosing dementia, the only way to determine that is to have her evaluated by a neuropsychologist and neurologist. They will do several hours of cognitive tests, tests of language processing, reasoning, memory, balance, perception and motor skills.
The symptom that you mention, saying that people are hiding things, is something that is frequently heard in dementia patients. No, that is NOT normal aging.