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We have a caregiver for our elderly parents. She worked in daycare before, has no formal training but is a mom so things are assumed. Despite being told to stop asking my parents if "they need to go potty", "honey, sweetie, little one", wanting to only be with my parents. Not recognizing when she should step away...example when our cousins visited my Dad having not seen them in 50 years, she remained in my parents apartment until she was introduced. My cousin stated later "who was that woman insinuating herself into our family". This past weekend I arrived to give my dad a bath and asked her to leave and return in 2 hours. When she returned she apparently asked the receptionist "is she out of here yet". She then came to their room, came right in and over to my mom "has she had water" I said yes I just gave her a drink. She ignored me and gave my mom more water...not even noticing that her cannula was not on. I then noticed and put my mom's air on her....the girl then came right over and attempted to put the cannula with me already doing it. Then she walks over to my dad. I had washed his hair and it was a bit fly away....she proceeds to lick her palm and slick down his hair. I immediately put my hands up and said "can you just stop it, they are not your parents and you are not their daughter". My sister likes her because she will sub at anytime for my sister. I suspect my sister tells her to ignore what I ask and say but I don't know for sure. All I want is for her to observe established boundaries for a caregiver. No gifts or presents, no honey, sweetie crap, understand when to back off.

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I get the feeling that you need to look at the two sides of this. She does seem to be getting too mother-hennish, but some of the things you said were rather aloof. If she is not being professional in her duties, you may want to fire her and hire a professional. Your caregiver knew childcare, so her behavior toward your parents doesn't surprise me. What do your parents think of her? That is important. I read they are in independent living, so I imagine they are still competent. 
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^^^. Yes, what do your parents think of her. That is what really counts here.

My Dad fired so many very decent caregivers...finding one that he got along with was a major issue. It is completely possible that you would go through a large number before finding another your parents like. Be careful what you wish for.

You obviously do not like her fawning over your parents....but...you are not on the receiving end of this. Talk to your parents.

Also, your sister having someone to count on to cover on a minutes' notice is a great benefit. Are you prepared to do the same while a search goes on to find a replacement that meets everyone's criteria?

Sorry to sound harsh, and I do get that it grates on your nerves.....but consider the possible alternatives.
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My thoughts take them or not... If she is good with your parents then so be it. Who are the cousins that have not seen them for you said 50 yrs to say anything???? So she is super attentive to them GREAT, be grateful that's a rare thing to find!
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Nope. You need to find true licensed caregivers for a caregiving job. When they become needing care more, a daycare person will not know how to recognize when and how to help your parents. Worked for a family that had a housekeeper taking care of their parents besides the experienced caregivers because they had her for 10 years and she would happily come in for an hour or two. The mother fell 3 times when the housekeeper was with her because the housekeeper didn't have the training to understand people who ambulated with walkers always needed someone watching at all times. She would leave the room. The housekeeper was never let go because she was a "family" housekeeper. EMT personnel knew the parents by name. If you want that kind of care, by all means keep the daycare person.
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Observe established boundaries... Which are what, exactly? If you feel that what your parents actually need is a discreet, self-effacing servant, good luck with finding one of those. What they have is a caregiver whose personality you don't happen to like. But if your parents do, that's what matters. Is this actually about your disapproving of your sister's choice?

There's nothing unreasonable about her expecting to be introduced to family members. On the contrary, what if your long-lost relatives had been left thinking "who was that rude woman who was in the apartment and buggered off the second we arrived without so much as a 'good morning'?" Then again, first you criticise her for failing to notice a problem immediately, then you criticise her for trying to remedy it once you'd drawn attention to it. She can't win, can she? The way you describe events, it does rather sound as if this poor woman is scared stiff of you. And you can't then be very surprised if she's rolling her eyes and hoping not to encounter you.

You don't have to like her, but do try to be less frigid and more appreciative of her efforts. You will then be better placed to discourage her from doing (I agree) irritating things such as addressing your parents as though they are slightly dim infants and spitting on her hanky to wipe their faces (eeuw!)
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It sounds to me you might be a little jealous. Accept the behavior for what it is and appreciate it. I know it can grate on your nerves. We have a house keeper one day a week and she stays 8 to 10 hours. She fawns over my husband, puts his bib on, wipes his mouth when he is eating, cuts his hair and manicures his toes. When she comes in to work about noon, she first fixes lunch. My husband is the king and I am a second thought. It bothered me at first but it makes my husband so happy, he has dementia and I don't fuss over him like she does. It gives me a days rest from caregiving and I appreciate what she does. She can baby him all she wants too and he eats it up. So try to use the woman to give you some needed relief. I mean this in only the nicest way.
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She doesn't notice mom's interrupted oxygen supply....but she's "right there" when dad has a cowlick. FAIL.

Noxious personality aside, she is unqualified. Lack of training. Lack of manners. Lack of common sense.

I am not dissing her childcare background. It is important work. Everyone on this site who has raised kids understands those challenges. An important difference here is: In her previous work environment, her clients' abilities increased as she invested time in them. That's the natural arc of child development. Whether she is conscious of it or not, this is her ingrained expectation.

With elder care, the pendulum swings the other way. No matter how much she fawns over your parents, they will get worse. Their medical needs will increase. Their assistive needs will increase. That's the sad fact of aging. There's no "reward system" to improve COPD or reverse muscle wasting. You can't cajole away congestive heart failure.

And transferring a 170-pound adult on/off the toilet is completely different than shooing a toddler into the restroom. Let's see how sweet she is after gets a rotator cuff injury during "tinkle time." Actually, let's not.

Her open disrespect for you is also a red flag. Ignores you when you ask her to speak to adults like adults. Disparages you to the front desk staff. This can only get worse.

Her possessiveness with your parents is inappropriate, too. Caring is good. Control is bad. She has no business grandstanding during a family visit. Your parents' social interactions are not about her, yet she wants to make them about her. Hmmm?

Perhaps she's ingratiating herself so that she can fleece your parents. You don't want to learn the hard way that they co-signed a car loan for "that sweet girl." Or let her use their credit cards. Or re-wrote their wills in her favor.

You would do well to start working on a replacement. Quietly, of course. It's touchy, because your parents are sucked in and your sister likes her. (Or your sister likes disagreeing with you.)

Who has the ability to hire/fire here? Are you POA? Is sis in charge? Who's paying?
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The caregiver sounds as if she has difficulty recognizing boundaries. When a caregiver is working in a private home there can often be a false sense of intimacy or familiarity. A professional caregiver will understand this and behave accordingly.

I'm with you when it comes to icky pet names like sweetie, honey, etc. And don't get me started on the word "potty"! This may be a habit leftover from working with children but it's patronizing and condescending and the caregiver should stop with the pet names.

And finally, do your parents like her? If they do then that's all that matters.
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Bottom line - who does/cooridnates the caregiving on a regular basis? If your sister appreciates her availability on short notice - I suspect she's the one who has to figure these things out on the fly...That is stressful...Having an available person to step up is a HUGE relief. What do your parent's think of this person? If they aren't offended and maybe even enjoy the attention, then there's no harm. Who's paying for the help for your parents and is anyone prepared to pay more for "professional" help when the current arrangement suits their needs for now? As long as the gal is not a "live-in", can you not just plan visits when she's not there? If you are going over to see your parents when she's "scheduled" to be there - you do realize you are shoo-ing her out of wages?
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Well, thank God someone cares for your aging parents! Of all the nightmares out there, this kind of person who actually cares is among the very select few among many who actually care because many don't. Yes there should be boundaries though. You can set boundaries without being hateful because you don't want to drive away the actual help you need especially during this time. There are so many caregivers out there and so very few who actually do it from the heart, and it sounds to me like this person really does care. However, you really do need to take precautions that it doesn't go beyond caring and into coercion and wrongful gain to steal family inheritance.

What you can do is express your appreciation that she actually cares enough to take care of your aging parents.

Also acknowledge her past experience as a mother and daycare worker.

Express your appreciation for her position in life and how far she has come.

Thank her that she has cared enough to care for so many others and even your parents. What you may want to do is to guide her as to when it's time to step away and just give it a rest. If you have her contact info, let her know that you will call her and that again she needs to know when to step away. What you can do is if you're expecting family over to your home, I would go ahead and relieve her first and send her home before calling your family. This is how I would handle it. If she won't leave, you can have your visitors back you up after a private conversation about what's going on. Just ask your guests to please help and if they care enough about you, they will step up to the plate and support you in any way needed.

I don't know if this caregiver is a professional or not, but professional caregivers are not going to want a bad name and definitely not a bad report getting back to their boss
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So thanks for all of your input. By the input it can go both ways. This caregiver works for an agency that has boudaries and rules that this caregiver routinely ignores. I'm no talking about firing her and I don't believe we should know caregivers on a "friend" or personal level. She is a person in my Father's employ. Observe the boundaries and all is well. It has nothing whatsoever to do with me disliking her personality...it has everything to do with executing her duties and observing boundaries...this would include not sitting in a chair colouring in her colouring book while my Mom's O2 is off her for whatever period of time.
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We can all see this differently and we do and all have had different experiences. My experience is they are not me can't do things the way I do but I pay them to do a job. I have had some that care and did a great job I had others that all it was was a job. Admit no one will ever do anything the way we do. I do things so different than my sister yet we both love our mom. But missing her oxygen is a big thing. I would get annoyed also with the way she talks to them most parents don't talk to there kids like that. I would just be honest say what you expect and want from her and go from there. I think her staying when the relatives that had seen them for 50 years was smart she doesn't know them she was doing her job looking out for your parents. You told her not to come back for 2 hrs so she asked if you were still there you can see that anyway you want she at least asked. There is never an easy solution but ask your parents there obviously competent. My mom has short term memory but she tells me if they fall asleep on the coach. So they know just ask. And remember no one will ever do what you do and how you do it. I know I'm the same way but we all need a break I've been doing this 13 yrs with mom now more constant since my dad passed in December. As for my sister we moved her in right next door to my mom so she's the main care giver and has been for about a year and a half so she does things her way and I do mine my way it all gets done and we both love mom. The people that relieve us 2 days every other week not always my cup of tea but I know she does well with my mom. Everyone has an opinion good luck
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We can all see this differently and we do and all have had different experiences. My experience is they are not me can't do things the way I do but I pay them to do a job. I have had some that care and did a great job I had others that all it was was a job. Admit no one will ever do anything the way we do. I do things so different than my sister yet we both love our mom. But missing her oxygen is a big thing. I would get annoyed also with the way she talks to them most parents don't talk to there kids like that. I would just be honest say what you expect and want from her and go from there. I think her staying when the relatives that hadnt seen them for 50 years was smart she doesn't know them she was doing her job looking out for your parents. You told her not to come back for 2 hrs so she asked if you were still there you can see that anyway you want she at least asked. There is never an easy solution but ask your parents there obviously competent. My mom has short term memory but she tells me if they fall asleep on the coach. So they know just ask. And remember no one will ever do what you do and how you do it. I know I'm the same way but we all need a break I've been doing this 13 yrs with mom now more constant since my dad passed in December. As for my sister we moved her in right next door to my mom so she's the main care giver and has been for about a year and a half so she does things her way and I do mine my way it all gets done and we both love mom. The people that relieve us 2 days every other week not always my cup of tea but I know she does well with my mom. Everyone has an opinion good luck
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Since you are concerned about the quality of care she is providing, perhaps it would be productive to suggest to the agency she works for that she receive some training in caring for the elderly, specifically in the areas where you notice deficiencies.
You did come off as being a bit condescending with the comment about the visitors. She should stay in attendance until she is dismissed by your parents or whoever is in charge. A simple statement from you or your parents like, "Sweetie," (I'm joking there), "you can go out for an hour while our visitors are here," doesn't sound like too much to ask. And if you don't want her there when visitors are present, don't schedule them during her shift.
She may be the best person the agency has for your parents. If improvement is needed, try to work on that without denigrating the ability she does bring to the job.
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kembrett, this is a caregiver support group. From what I read, you sent the caregiver away for 2 hours while you bathed your father. When she came back you noticed your mother's oxygen was off, so you turned it on. Then you blamed the caregiver for not turning it on while only you were there to do it.

There's something with you attitude that makes me think you're a difficult person. You want a domestic who will say yes, ma'am; no, ma'am like an old-fashioned housekeeper. Many of us would appreciate the person who is working for your mother and father. She sounds like a personable and dependable caregiver. I'm sure she is protective of your parents and mother-hens them. She spends a lot of time with them and probably feels a close relationship. IMO that is a good thing.
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I am seeing a big red flag in your post, kembrett. Just like BlackHole said, be alert for the possibility of fraud & financial theft. I am speaking as someone who has experienced this with my parents.
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I just let my dad's caregiver go a couple weeks ago (one of them). She was very sweet and was great with dad as far as his dementia went but she overstepped the boundaries of care giving and it was my dad that asked me to let her go. So I believe the advise that you got to "ask your parents" is good. My dad would joke around about firing this care givers but when he asked me to let her go he was serious. She had borrowed his tools and he didn't like that. She was bringing her sons over and he didn't like that. And I didn't like the fact that she didn't "hear" me when I told/asked her to do things. She came to "visit" on her off day. There were other things that happened that were strange that bothered me.
I agree that a daycare (if you mean children) person would not have the experience to know what may be happening with your parents (ie my dad had a stroke and his care giver knew what to do). And so hiring a person experienced with aging issues might be more beneficial.
I find it strange that she stayed the whole time the cousins came to visit. Yet, if she was being paid to be there that day and she left would she had been paid still? Perhaps it comes down to that.
It is tough to know what another person's motives are. When a care giver tells my dad "I love you" and they just met 3 days ago my "spidey radar" goes off. When they are willing to do "extra" w/o pay it goes off again. I guess I am not a trusting person because there are people in our life that are not trustworthy (ex family). So I'm on guard.
Talk to your parents. And talk to the care giver. And if necessary, talk to her boss at the agency. It's tough being an employer if you've never been and don't like to be in charge of people. I never wanted to be a supervisor and yet here I am. If she hasn't been a care giver to elders long it might just be inexperience.
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There's an inherent conflict in the roles and nature, for caregiving works best with a relationship, and if a caregiver is there over a long time, and acts attentive and friendly, a bond will grow between them and the elder. I find this is healthy, it helps a caregiver feel needed, useful, helps them be alert to any changes, and to help the elder cope with changes that might otherwise give them anxiety.

Not easy for family, but they can't have it both ways, and sadly, some tend to speak as if they can, as if they can be there rarely, yet judge and criticize a person who is.

For the family, there is a sense of intrusion into their world - but they are the ones who said, caring for this family member is too much for me, I want outside help. My stepfather was able to live on his own for about 10 years after my mother died, because he was helped by a full time caregiver. We all knew we were lucky that she was available, and the one brother most closely connected to our stepfather, was grateful and kept in touch and respected her.

The rest of us... I hated the way she decorated the house at Xmas - our mother loved natural decorations, for this woman, glittery plastic was just fine. It was hard for stepfather to talk for long, or very loud, so visits with him, involved her sitting in, and translating or speaking for him....

Life has so many dimensions and change is constant. I only visited once a year or every two years - yet it was still hard for me, for when I did make the 7 hour drive, I was eager to renew some old family connections and feelings of home that would be familiar and protect me - instead I felt I was arriving in a stranger's home. She would have listened to him, and would tell me how he often praised me, as if I was her daughter too - yech!!

Years later, I regretted any signs I had shown of my folly, difficulty recognizing a changed situation and new person, and let go my understandable but unrealistic longing for a home after my mother had died. When I became a home caregiver myself, and developed close and helpful relationships with several elders, kept them motivated, healthy and growing much longer than expected - I took pride in my work, and my elders became friends in my own life.

I've discovered with a shock - that an aging caregiver can be a pretty lonely person, for those wonderful seniors, that were not "ours" to begin with, but sometimes for 3-6 years, became "ours" in important ways - they all died. I've gone to some funerals, and realized with a shock, that even though the elder knew, cared and trusted me, the family didn't know me, and suddenly I was nobody, in a home that I had helped take care of for years. Years later, I ask myself why I'm not very sociable - and realize, I had close friends with a long series of elders - I count myself fortunate, and i always worked to maintain boundaries and respect for all - but as I succeeded, I felt part of things, and then families move on, stay in touch with each other, and have nothing to do with me. I tend to think that humans are naturally designed to live in villages, stable villages over time, so that different people can fill different roles as needed, and not be cut off as our professional leaders expect.

Last note, I found the best caregivers for my disabled brother, whom I placed 5 hours away from me, in country settings. The best caregivers who reassured him and noticed changes that could disrupt his progress - were those who took a particular interest in him, one borrowed videotapes from him. Meanwhile the professionals would not lift a finger to help him, after the clock struck their hour, drive past him even if they saw him walking outdoors to get home in bad weather. I understand boundaries, we just need to find ways to include humanity, care, love, respect for all parties - along with them.
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Do you have a position description for this person?
Do you have performance standards that are clear and explicit?
Have you ever set out what she should do in unexpected situations, such as a visit from a family member?
Do you have a clear payment policy,e.g. does she get paid when you ask her to leave?
Did you interview several persons before she was hired?
Have you had a conversation about this caregiver with your parents?
Is she honest or does she steal from your parents?
If your parents like her, would you be willing to find a training program so that she could improve her skills and knowledge of the elderly?
In closing, I feel that your nose is pressed to the glass about this caregiver. You need to step away and evaluate what she brings to the table as well as her shortcomings.
Unless you make your expectations clear, she will not know what you expect from her. Caregivers are not mind readers!
Good luck
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As a retired RN of over forty years I have learned that there are many ways to care for others. You certainly hit a nerve with others here.
It's hard to to know how to take care of parents. It causes a lot of worry and second guessing. When we feel unsure it gets easy to try to control more and more things. It's exhausting.
It also needs a team. A team with different skills and abilities.
You have you parent's best interests. It sounds like you want them to have kind and competent care. And you are willing to make sure they get it. You are loving and capable.
The aide's gift is that she is patient, caring and nurturing. She's not an educated, health professional. But even if her communication style irritates you, do the things she brings to your parents care make their lives better?
You have framed this in your mind as a boundry violation. You should always be alert for this, but boundries can have some give.
If she is verbally abusive, neglecting her duties, is physically rough or abusive you need to act now.
If her behavior irritates you, but the care is safe and compassionate, can you let her be part of the team?
Can you sit with her and validate her good points, then talk about exactly what you want her to do? Just the do, not the do nots.
Those on this site who are telling you things could be worse are warning you about how hard it is to find caring help.
Listen. Let go of every harmless behavior that grates on you, focus on the care, and be clear with expectaions and validate the good things. And stay vigilent.
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Concerned about her not noticing the oxygen. That sounds like incompetence and directly affects mom's health. The rest may be indicative of irritating habits/ personality, or may indicate more, as a few have suggested and need careful watching. Maybe it is time for a good talk with the agency about the issues you have with her. The over familiarity/personal style, if it is just that, is aggravating but, in itself, may not be enough for serious concern.
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Have you sat down and talked to your parents caregiver about the boundaries you think are appropriate? How often do you care for your parents? How often do you visit your parents. Sometimes caregivers can't do anything right to some members of the family. I was caring for a client whose family had come over to visit and I stayed out of the room so they could have some privacy, well her son wanted to know why I was not in the room caring for his mother while they were there. I would talk to your parents caregiver before I would dismiss her.
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Castle...your response was so thoughtful and inclusive of both sides. I can relate to your wanting "home" as my own mother passed away 20 years ago. I tried to maintain "her" home they way she did. One of the things hardest for me is seeing "home" deteriorate as I cannot maintain it anymore (I'm 60 and tired) and care givers rearrange things and do things "their way" . I just asked dad's care giver to not pull the mini blinds all the way up, leaving the window completely uncovered. "We" never did that as it is a West facing window and the sun beating in makes that room hot. "She" loves the light (the washer and dryer are right there). But yesterday dad asked me "who keeps pulling up the blinds on that window?" So, I asked her to please not do it. I would come in and let them down, next time I'm there (every other weekend) they are up again. She said "Your dad and I like to look at the roses outside the window, but I'll do it your way." The care giver I let go volunteered to wash the drapes. I said ok. She "lost" 2 drapery panels and a tie back!! She had no clue where they went and when she hung up the others she hung them up wrong. (so my "moms" house now has no drapes on that window and I cannot match them as they are older).
I guess I'm trying to say....It's all just so hard. And yes, we as "the employers" need to take into account the care giver and their motives. BUT at the same time, you hear the horror stories about a care giver "getting close to elder" and then they are stealing from them.
It's so hard and it lasts so long.
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When the caregiver speaks to your parents with those phrases and terms you mentioned, it is called Elderspeak and VERY DEMEANING. The caregiver is not demonstrating ethical care or dignity to your parents when she talks to them this way. Also by doing this she is creating a pathological dependency in them and this is a precursor to elder abuse. I would not continue to employ her. Your parents are vulnerable. You need to be very watchful. I have seen elder abuse before and it starts with emotional exploitation.
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I speak from experience. There are two ways of looking at this situation. First of all, if she does a good job and takes good care of the patient, that is a plus. Perhaps she doesn't know she should step out when family is present. We have no idea how she was brought up. I would politely tell her you want some "private" time with your patient and she should respect that - if not, make it plain to her in firm words - she must excuse herself. Perhaps at the end of the visit, you could include her in some coffee/cake time before the visit is over. On the negative side - and only time will tell - some caretakers will deliberately endear themselves to the patient to such a degree that they have a hidden motive. I was friends with someone and was her guardian and POA for 28 years. In the beginning someone like this literally "took over" (I worked full time and looked after her at night and on the weekends) and before long I discovered some horrible things, i.e. she was being paid cash by the patient AND getting checks from the patient (being paid twice for the same work). Eventually I fired her and her son came and threatened me (I was terrified) until I told him I would discuss things with the attorney and get back to him. Well, he ran....he had a long criminal history. End of that. Then later someone managed to extort about $l00,000 from the patient an wrote a large check and cashed it. After six months of sheer h*ll, I got the money back into the patient's account. So what I am saying is: it might be genuine caring and a desire to "share" in the family atmosphere OR it could be someone wanting to eventually take what they can get. I can't tell - but beware is all I can say.
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Forgive me for saying this - but she's with them all the time - are you jealous of her feeling so attached to your parents? If you can't or won't stay with them 24/7, maybe you need to be thankful that you have someone caring for them and about them.

I thought you were going to complain about stealing and laziness - but this doesn't seem to be the case.

BTW, I ask my DH all the time if he needs to wee-wee. Same with eating and drinking. And I must assist him any time he leaves his chair so he doesn't fall.

If you're really concerned about how she treats your parents when you're not there, invest in a camera. Otherwise maybe a "thank you" is in order.
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Janny57 - you can buy little pieces of hardware- sometimes called "hold downs" but any employee in the window covering department of a Lowes or Home Depot will know what your mean - theyre single function in life - the hold down, not the employee - is to keep mini blinds down and secured in place.
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Are your parents happy with her, because I guess that is what really matters. If not and she really bothers you that much, get rid of her.
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I've been a nurse 40 yrs, which included Private Duty nursing in peoples homes. The relationship between caregivers & family is a delicate balance. 1) It is in the patient & families best interest to find, and keep, competent caring help who is also punctual & dependable. That sounds great however, anyone reading this probably knows that bundle is NOT easy to find. Therefor, all family needs to try hard to get along with the caregiver(s) & attempt to make their jobs as simple & pleasant as possible. 2) It is in the Caregivers best interest to make the patient & family happy, comfortable, & confident in the behavior & decisions of that caregiver. If the above two are not kept in balance frustration, probably on both sides, will increase to the level you are currently at.
Problem: a) You want caregiver to stop treating parents like children, b) You want family to have more privacy when visiting with parents, c) You want Caregiver to stop talking & treating parents like a child.
Solutions: a) Have family only meeting (include your parents unless you think it will stress them out too much) & decide if you want to try to work things out with current caregiver or find someone else now. (No matter that decision, still do the remaining suggestions). b) Type out a Caregiver / Family Contract, with what family expects from the Caregiver [ EXAMPLE: * Speak to 'client' as an adult (NO baby talk...). * NO gifts are to be given to or received from Caregiver & client/clients family (this includes everything except special occasion card...), * When family arrives, there will be a short Report given between Caregiver & family to update each on current care & any pending issues, then the Caregiver is to go ___________ until _________ (the Caregiver will / will not be paid during the time the Family is caring for clients & Caregiver is not.
c) NO cellphone use while on duty, except _________. d) TV use is for client, & is to be on channels that client desires. e) Fluids are to be offered to client(s) every 2 hours.... f) Clients meals are to be prepared by __________ . g) Caregiver is expected to arrive shift within 5 minutes of start of shift ________ , and leave shift within ________minutes of end of shift _________. h) Caregiver is to not have her family, friends, ... in clients room or around client during work shift or any other time, except __________.
i) Client(s) family member __________ will pay Caregiver a salary of $______ every _________week/week(s) . Also Caregiver will receive bonus pay of $_______per hour of work on ________ Holidays... j) Family has provided __________ place for Caregiver to store her personal meal/food brought for that days shift. k) Family has provided ________ place for Caregiver to sit / stay /... while family is visiting. l) Family has approved Caregiver to adjust air conditioning/heat controls to keep temperature between _____________ .
Things to Remember: Never yell, curse,... at the Caregiver whether alone or in front of others, and Never allow the Caregiver to do the same to you or the clients. The Caregiver is your employee, be a boss any Caregiver would love to work for (Caregivers often know other Caregivers so you getting a bad reputation is not in your benefit). Competent, punctual, available on short notice, caring, fun, loving, clean, intelligent Caregivers, that make the client smile and the day go by quicker are difficult to find. It is usually best to try to work out any problems, and learn to compromise a little (Caregivers are people too, & also have families, get sick,..) is usually in the family's best interest, plus in the client's best interest because they like familiarity and tend to dislike change.
If your situation does not improve, find someone else.
Also remember, if you want professional work, hire a professional.
Obviously always be on alert for any signs of Elder Abuse (Google it), whether the Caregiver is a male or female.
I wish you all well.
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My mother passed away 3 months ago. She would NEVER accept any type of help till the police were finally called by my father’s social worker. Then she went away in handcuffs for continually beating the tar out of my dad. I'm grateful that she spent the last months of her life in memory care. Among professional people who knew how to care for her. Finally an end to her pounding on my dad physically and on my door at midnight (we live next door to each other and she tore down the fence between the properties). My mother could have driven the Devil himself to drink! May she rest in peace. Now I am the sole caregiver for dad, who is 94. I am completely alone with this situation. My husband is over 800 miles away - we cannot yet live together because of his work in the city he lives in (to which I want to move) and my commitment here to care for the parental unit. My only sister is over 1,500 miles away. I'm almost 65. I still work full-time. I have migraines that are getting worse (gee, I wonder why??) I desperately need help at least one day a week. Someone to just drive dad around - take him to Wienerschnitzel for lunch, to Costco to pick up his prescriptions and just generally get his focus off of ME. He flat out refuses to transfer his prescriptions to somewhere that I can get to on a M-F, 9 to 5 work schedule. I have crowd-related anxiety and refuse on all grounds to go to a COSTCO IN LOS ANGELES on a Saturday; I am not a masochist and am determined to take care of myself as much as possible. So dad has 3 choices: (a) move the prescriptions; (b) take a taxi; (c) go without. That’s it. But I am absolutely terrified at the thought of someone coming in and calling him "sweetie," "honey," etc. Dad is lonely and starved for attention. I get it. The problem is, he will give money to any woman who panders to him - and let’s face it, most caretakers are women. Tie-in to another post here: my dad is now throwing his soiled diapers directly into the trash bin outside. Dear God - the stench and the flies! He does NOT have dementia and he DOES know better – if I put my cat’s dirty litter directly into the trash, I’d never hear the end of it (hmmmm, maybe I should just so he can get a whiff/experience what it smells like). But the thought of some woman coming in and calling him "sweetie" while cheerfully wrapping up his dirty diaper in a plastic bag and then having him slip her a C-note every time she does it is more than I can bear. He is not a millionaire. He’s just ripe for the picking by someone who preys on the elderly and figures out from Day One that his wallet can be had in exchange for a big, fake smile and telling him how cute he is. The male ego! He still gets on a boat and goes DEEP SEA fishing with buddies less than a half or a third of his age a few times a year. They literally carry him on and off the boat. Every time he goes, he comes home and tells me how great the guys are. He says “all the guys said hey, give me a call anytime! I’ll take you to Costco!” LIP SERVICE. He would never call anyone to ask for help and they bloody well know it. They do not reach out and call him. They all come from a culture that pretty much sees women as being placed on this planet to serve men – especially Eldest Daughter. So as long as I’m still in service, no one much gives a rat’s a**. If I die before dad does, they’ll all just be like – oh, well – that was her job, after all. Good daughter! I’m sorry, this got really long. I’m just venting and I hope that’s OK. There is no solution to this unless I am willing to take huge risks. I’m so grateful to have a place to come and write it out. Where there are others in the same “boat,” ha ha. No pun intended. I pray several times a day for strength. To be patient, tolerant and kind. To understand that the problems associated with extremely advanced age are not something he wished for. I'm just tired to the marrow of my bones. YIKES. ONE DAY AT A TIME, right??
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