Long-time reader, first time poster here....My dad is nearing his 89th birthday. He and my mom moved into AL about a year ago for a variety of reasons with both their health, though until age 87 they were incredibly fortunate and lived very independently. Daddy's cognitive condition is showing decline and my mom (who was once a science teacher and highly rational--not governed by emotion much at all) is asking us to have him tested for dementia. His speech is becoming garbled, his temper is much shorter and he will pop off about things that he once would have let slide. I'm trying to determine how aggressively we need to know exactly what is going on. I'm not sure that it is useful to know at this stage of the game as he doesn't really need to add more medications to his 4 pages worth, though mom thinks they can just give him a pill and it will make him better. He is also becoming more and more incontinent, and has had several UTI's, which I know can cause some cognitive challenges. We are seeing a urologist about that dimension. We are facing a challenge with their long term care insurance, for which having some kind of memory diagnosis might be beneficial to help him assess for a higher level of care, but I am also concerned that going through this and adding a word like dementia will just be emotionally devastating (and concerned that if we get a diagnosis like that that he'll need to be moved to memory care and that could separate him from my mom, which would be dreadful for them both). We are going to have a consultation with a neurologist this week, but you all have a lot of crowd sourced wisdom among you and I thought I'd see what the hive mind thinks. Would you put him through what are likely to be a lot of frustrating and exhausting tests or would you take a more low-intervention approach? Between them, we have 9 doctors appointments in a 3 week period and I work full time. We've got some help with transportation from friends, and that's worked well for the last year, but as their health declines, I'm feeling like I need to be at every appointment to hear with my own ears what is being assessed, and that is really wearing me down. I'm a late in life child, and so I'm nowhere near being able to retire to care for them full time, unfortunately.
I had both my parents living in Assisted Living together when dad really needed Skilled Nursing. I jumped through every fiery hoop known to man to keep them together after 68 years of marriage until my dad passed 1 year later.
Does the AL have an in house doctor you can use for both your parents? I have found this to be a HUGE benefit in cutting down the 100 doctor's appointments that tend to pile up with the elderly. The geriatric docs who come into these facilities see A LOT of elderly folks and are quite capable of handling a host of issues. Once your dad is diagnosed, the in house doc should be sufficient. I myself don't believe in continued appointments with neurologists because WHAT exactly are they going to DO about dementia? Not a damned thing.
Best of luck moving forward.
The head nurse gave me invaluable advice for the wife's care, including going to the geri-psych ward at a hospital to find a medication that would calm her down without doping her up. She was incontinent and wouldn't let anyone clean her up. It took 3 1/2 weeks there to find the right medication and dosage. After that, she was very calm and cooperative until she passed away.
The husband is still there and this facility agreed to take public financing after 18 months of regular payments. He had been there 4 years now and we have another year or so of money to use, but he will never have to leave.
I like that he always has company at meal time, that the staff checks on him regularly and makes sure he is o.k., with a health professional visiting him once a month to check on him. He is physically healthy at age 93, just can't remember from one minute to the next what he has just asked you or told you or what you replied.
To make it even better, the man in charge of leasing these apartments, JJ, asked why I was doing this when I wasn't even a family member. I explained how I had met them 46 years earlier, how we became friends and without children or close family members, I was the one they turned to when they need this guidance and decision making. He was so impressed. We became friends over the 2 1/2 years it took to get them to move in and JJ left shortly after they got there to have a more flexible schedule to care for his own father with dementia issues. His wife suggested he get a real estate license, which he did, and when I finally got my friend's condo ready to sell, JJ became my realtor, giving me advice and handling all the paper work. I felt so lucky to have found such a place for my friends to be and am very thankful for how things are working out. And without other family involved, there was no one second guessing my judgement or trying to get into their assets. I am also executor of their will, so know what their intentions were for any remaining assets.
The key, though, was finding a place with a memory care apartment large enough for a married couple. I visited 9 different assisted living facilities before I found the one that would work. And boy, did it work!
Good luck. It is a lot to handle but you will get through it.
My YB has taken charge of mother and he feels it a personal affront to have someone label her as 'demented' yet I feel if I KNEW that's what was wrong with her, I would be a lot more sympathetic towards her when she blasts me with anger or some completely thoughtless remark that leaves me reeling.
My Dh is in 'charge' of his mother and he will barely even visit her. Maybe 10 minutes in 2 weeks. He lets his sister bear all the CG and won't help. His mother recently spent 6 weeks in a hospital then a NH. I am not allowed around her (she finds me to be a trigger to her temper, so I have to stay away). She's back home with a walker, an oxygen tank and tubing and clue not one as to what she's supposed to be doing--has refused in home care, so it all falls on SIL. Another huge fall is almost inevitable.
KNOWING isn't that bad. NOT KNOWING is awful. MIL wound up in the hospital b/c she had a raging UTI and even after that was completely cleared up, she was still screaming at people and causing a real ruckus. Is this her new personality? Would help DH and SIL to know how to treat her, instead of just sighing and saying "oh well she's old and mad".
Sounds like your mom has her finger on the button. Support her, as she is the primary CG and lives with your dad.
if in fact it is truly cognitive decline, at least the most severe symptoms can be modified by being more advanced with lifestyle and nutrition. Some ALF are beginning to use some of the protocols of Dr Dale Bredesen.
I wish you well.
you can familiarize yourself with dementia testing. Great advice on YouTube. You can even try a few tests out yourself on your dad. On of my favorites is drawing a circle like a clock, and having him mark the hours. so if he has dementia, what to do? study it. The AL must have a consultant you can talk to. Dementia can advance at different rates. Again, one cannot foresee or calculate the future state of mind at any one point. this is where "exactly" becomes a useless word. I do agree with a brain scan or something to create a baseline. But first, address the medication situation,and ask yourself, are there any doctors you can eliminate? Remind your mom she is not a doctor. I hope this helps. You are a good daughter to care so much about your folks. But remember your own health is just a important.
My first question after every proposed drug, test, procedure, is “what is the goal and how will his life be better if the goal is met?” Doctors need to understand your expectations clearly.
Also, I agree that, once any treatable causes for the cognitive issues (like a UTI) are ruled out, there is no real benefit to having a specific diagnosis of dementia nor to knowing the exact stage. If the family and doctors acknowledge that dementia exists, What’s the point if the testing?.
Personally, I don’t think the drugs are worth the side effects. They just make docs and families feel like they’re doing something. My dad had no discernible improvement. That’s also been the experience of others I know whose loved one has taken them.
The worst thing that happened is when my mom was told she had dementia/ AD. literally the moment before that she was enjoying life. After that she shut down. Went through a depression that she is still going through. If he has a caretaker( which sounds like between your mom and the AL he does) then I don’t believe there is any need for him to know. Have him tested in a way he doesn’t know about but don’t let him know the outcome.
It was the same way when my Dad was dying with lung cancer. He realized he needed to take care of some business before it was too late. I too am one of those people who want to know..
Mum is asking for help. Please listen to her and arrange for the testing. Especially if it may get him access to LTC benefits and perhaps give Mum a much needed break.
You do not know that it would be dreadful for Mum if he is moved to a higher level of care. It may give her the opportunity to go back to being a wife and partner and stop being a care giver.
My hope would be if you find a compassionate neurologist they will not push unnecessary testing.
In my mom's case we just literally sat and chatted for a couple hours and he got the sense of things with his years of expertise. There was no sense in going ahead with testing because it would be of no benefit and not change the outcome; he knew that the meds were not going to change anything at mom's age (at least 95 at the time). So many people want to believe in the miracle of the pills...
Since communication is so essential as you figure it all out, these diagnostic appts are probably the more important ones for you to be present at. And of course the sooner a test is done and treatment underway for a potential UTI, the better.
And elder law attorney would be a good place to get some unbiased info in re to labeling dad with a diagnosis and the impact on the living arrangements...either that or the local long term care ombudsman so your rights are protected.
If you wind up needing incontinence supplies check out HDIS which delivers and has a wide variety of stuff...good luck...
Put your mind at ease and have the testing done. Then you and everyone concerned will know what you are dealing with and if there are issues you can move forward with the proper care.
Best wishes for you and your family.
Thanks for pointing out information about strokes. I took care of my dad after a stroke. Testing can reveal numerous situations. I feel it’s better to know what you are dealing with rather than to wonder about it. Seems like not having all the facts would be more stressful.
It sounds to me as though your mom is begging for help.
It sounds like she is worried about what is going on behaviorally. As someone said above, if he is acting out his anger and incontinent, he may be at the moderate stage already.
Keep the neuro appointment and bring along a list of all that mom is concerned about. Give this to the doctor to read beforehand. Dad may "showtime" like crazy.
Consider also if there is a geriatric psychiatrist who visits the AL and sees patients there.
It was my mom's geri psych who insisted on a cognitive evaluation for my mom, but that was because she had developed off the chart anxiety that was difficult for all of us (incl. mom) to cope with. Finding out that she had cognitive issues made it easier for all of to justify simplifying our language, lowering our expectations and doing much more high level planning FOR her instead of expecting her to remain the highly organized person she'd always been.
Be guided by the neurologist's recommendations. S/he won't recommend a full cognitive battery if it's going to be frustratingly impossible for dad. Doing a simple evaluation like the MoCa may be all that is needed in this case, along with brain imaging.
Meds that may be recommended should focus on his anger and possible depression and anxiety.
I'd also be going over those 4 pages of meds with a pharmacist or a geriatrics doc to see if there are any interactions that could be causing the anger. And if they are all actually necessary. Sometimes, less is more.
Although a painless brain scan can be a good thing to have as a baseline, behavioral assessment can be a better way of figuring out what to do about day to day living.
My mom had a very severe hemorrhagic stroke at 85, and a brain scan revealed global “shrinkage”.
Her recovery was almost instantaneous however, and she returned home to live by herself with minimal assistance until she was almost 90.
For my present dependent LO, visits by a gentle, affable psychiatric PA gave us a focused, very revealing description of what aspects of her cognitive processes were deteriorating, and we hen had a framework of how to address her issues both from a behavior management and a medical standpoint.
A terribly tough call, but my feeling is that whatever info can be collected as painlessly as possible, benefits the person being assessed.