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Long story short. Dad lives alone in PA. He is 85. I live in FL. I am an only child. My mother died in 2018. My dad took care of her till the very end.

Dad is in very good health for his age although he has had lifelong depression issues. At the end of 2021, he was admitted to the hospital for a blood pressure issue which got resolved fairly easily. Yet, while he was in there, a nurse gave him a Short Blessed Test--a 2 minute cognitive test--which he failed. In PA when this happens, the doctor must immediately alert the DMV, that then suspended my dad's driver's license. He can only get it back by taking a neuropsych test and passing it. He failed a cognitive test way back in like 2010, which obviously was a false positive--which tells me this recent test could be bogus too.

When he learned about the Dec. 2021 test failure at the beginning of 2022, he was enraged. He thinks he got screwed. He wasn't even told he failed it until he got out of the hospital, allegedly--I wasn't there.

Well, now I'm here in PA with him. I came up as soon as he told me. His appeal date regarding all of this isn't until April 22. Luckily, I can take my work with me, I'm single, no kids and I've been driving him around for the last month. I give him 2 hours a day for father/son time.

Yet, the very first time I told him I had to do my work and couldn't go out for breakfast, he took the keys and went out anyway. He was gone for 3 hours. When he came home I tried to talk to him about it and he just keep obsessing about how the hospital screwed him in December. He claimed he never said he wouldn't drive despite not having a license--which is a lie. He says he is not going to allow them to take his freedom. Seriously, he is a guy who up until this time would go somewhere every day. To see his friends. To the park. Just for a drive. Because he gets horrible cabin fever.

Do I believe he is a safe driver? Yes. Does he manage his own finances? Yes. Does he manage his medications well? Yes. Any signs of dementia or anything? No. He can recall what he ate yesterday, who he talked to, etc. Even if his primary care doctor believes he is capable of driving safely. But I could never expect him to use Uber or Lyft.

However, I am now the one trying to get him an appointment so he can take another test, all the while he sits doing a crossword puzzle. And it's clear, he will lie to me and do whatever he wants no matter how much I help him.

Should I just give the car keys to someone, go back to FL and let him figure this out himself? Because I am losing respect for him second by second. Really, I think he thinks because he took care of my mother for those years that I should do the same for him. The difference? My mother really was virtually helpless and never put up any fight with the help my dad gave her. She was thankful. Him? He's a teenager.

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Oomezoome, this post is from Feb. Since this is the OPs first and only post, I doubt she/he has been back since her/his update.
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The hospital is trying to help you. Giving your dad back his license at his age, could and probably will have serious ramifications for you and him. How would you feel if a criminal followed your dad home from a store or something and robbed him. Yes, it happened to my dad. How would you feel if he got in a wreck and died? Guilty, If bet. How would you feel if he killed someone else? Incredibly guilty and stupid. If that happens, your dad will go to jail for life and the other party will take everything your father owns. He may be okay now, but a license is good for 4 years. Where will he be in 2 years. Cognitive decline? That’s when predators will find him. Just saying. Take the blessing you’ve been given and stay the course: no license/no driving. Get him the number to the Access Van. Senior transport. It’s cheap.
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Cover999 Jul 2022
Maybe he lives were public transit is not that good or non existent. Senior Transport? Lol

Limited to where they can take him. If it is a for profit place, no go.
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Good to hear this tale had a happy ending - Dad is again driving & cleared medically to do so.

Clearwater, it reads like you did an excellent job of being his Advocate. While he raged at the unfairness, you found out the facts, who to contact, go the right wheels in motion.

If I was psychic, I might say there may be more of that in your future...

You've had a good test-drive on Advocate Road.

As for for that *he took care of Mother so you will need to take care of him the same way* plan of his. If that is a dead end street, signpost it now. "Dad you were MARRIED to Mom. I am not married to you. Never will be".

Go further & explain you won't be his nurse, maid or cook & certainly not the royal bottom wiper! Tell him now or save that for later.

What you WILL do is if/when gets gets too old & dodery you'll help him pick out a nice room in the old people's home.

Keep up that bumper sticker "Me son - not maid"
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Whatever you decide to do, you must stop your Dad from driving until (if) he is cleared to do so. I doesn't matter what either you or he thinks about his capability to drive or the validity of the tests. He has been deemed incapable of driving and until he can prove otherwise, it is illegal for him. The legal ramifications are massive and if he were to get into a wreck, even a small one, he would face serious legal issues. If he is incapable of adhering to the law and not driving, you need to either take serious action (take away his keys) or leave and let him deal with consequences.

If you feel you can't deal with his actions and it is damaging your relationship, leave and go back to your life. If he isn't going to change what difference will you have on his actions?
He can still get out every day as there are so many easy and affordable options from ride-sharing companies. It may not be the same freedom as he had before, but he would avoid any criminal activity and be able to have an independent life.
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I'd keep a close eye on dad if it were me. He passed the cognition exams and got his license back, that's great. He's also 85 years old with what sounds like a bad temper & quick to explode, get obsessive about things & also get enraged/stubborn/argumentative. You called him a 'teenager' in your post. You also told him to 'never take another cognition test again b/c he doesn't need one & can't trust the results anyway.' In reality, the man is 85 and may indeed need another cognition test down the road. You don't live with him and cannot observe his daily functioning skills; you don't know if/when he'll decline cognitively or physically, unless you keep your ears pealed & highly tuned for changes, even subtle ones, and know what to look for. Things change with elders, sometimes on a DIME; I've seen it firsthand with two parents.

This is not to say dad is cognitively impaired or that the hospital did not make a mistake; hospitals make mistakes all the time; I've seen very shoddy care handed out to elders, my mother among them. If their issue is not Covid related where the hospital can rake in $100K, they want the elder OUT OF THERE asap. Whether your dad was 'screwed over on purpose' or not is another matter entirely. Elders have bad days themselves, suffer from hospital delirium, and DO answer cognitive exam questions wrong. Which causes them to fail a quick mini exam in short order.

Just a word of caution about considering your father fine for life now. Don't do it. Don't ever think an 85 year old man is 'fine for life' because he never is. None of us are, actually, b/c we're all mortals and as such, subject to illness, both mental and physical. Be on alert for when dad needs you again. Don't get lax b/c of this incident with the hospital who dropped the ball, is my point. Visit dad as often as you can and keep him in your radar at all times.

Wishing you all the best of luck moving forward.
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OOMEZOOME Jul 2022
You’re right on.
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The resolution:

This past Monday, March 14, 2022, my dad went to a neuropsychologist. The doc gave him all sorts of tests for like 2 hours. Dad passed virtually all of them--no problem. My dad got his driver's license back today after bringing the doctor's paperwork to the DMV.

All of this makes me believe even more now that someone at the hospital screwed my dad over on purpose. Somebody who was just having a bad day wanted to make someone else miserable too.

I told my dad, "From now on, if you have to go to the hospital, please go. But you do not take any more cognitive tests there. You don't need one. And you can't trust the results anyway."

He is relieved. I am relieved.
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Isthisrealyreal Mar 2022
Good news. Well done getting this sorted sooner than later.

I would make sure and have DPOA, DMCPOA and HIPAA paperwork in place for dad. This will give you authority from FL. to monitor his hospital stay, including testing.

Many people get hospital delirium that clears up once they are home. I find any mental testing in a hospital atrocities, people are sick enough to be hospitalized and not functioning as normal. To make these types of decisions is self righteous by incompetent medical staff.

This is the BS attitude that makes medical errors the 3rd leading cause of death in the USA. Very much a "who gives a damn" attitude that results in death and destruction for patients and their families.

Your dad is very blessed to have you as his advocate.

Love Clearwater. Such a lovely, quite place to visit.
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I think you are lucky to be able to leave, knowing that you have done what you could. To be honest, when you have anyone different full time, it’s easy to get irritated by habits you don’t like. The on-off personality, always 'off' with you, is particularly irritating because it rubs in that they have choice and control over their behavior.

Let’s hope that with a break, you will feel better about him, and he will work out how to live his own life. Best wishes, Margaret
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Update.

I have gotten him an appointment with a neuropsychologist on March 14. My dad is already negative that he will not pass whatever tests he is given and he's convinced himself he will never get his license back. Which of course depresses him even more.

I am going back to FL on Monday. I've resolved that I've done everything I can for him. He has people he can call to help him out with rides here and there. But he is very depressed. Negative. But he's been that way for a long time.

Over the past 5 weeks I've noticed how he can just turn the charm on and off when he wants. Negative in the car. But when we get to one of this favorite spots, he'll be Mr. Personality with the waitresses or whoever. I'm kind of over it. I feel like he is trying to guilt me. I just feel like he is trying to pull me down to wherever he is as well. And when I don't agree with him, he gets nasty.

He's the one who says he can do everything. Okay. I guess we'll find out.
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Take Dad to a Neurologist. He/she will do more testing. This way you will find out what is going on. IMO if Dad was tested in 2010 he would have progressed a lot further in almost 12 years if he had Dementia. If Dementia is found make sure the doctor sits down, looks Dad in the eye and tells him. Nothing was done with DMV when he was tested in 2010 because insurance companies are probably nor required to report their findings.

When my grandson's license was taken away for epilepsy the State of NJ requested his license be returned to them. When it was reinstated my grandson kept putting in it was suspended which comes with a fee. Found out he had to say it was a medical reinstatement.
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P.S. Go on Teepa Snow's website, too.

I would encourage you to reframe 'losing respect' to understanding dementia and finding compassion. Perhaps you need to step back. This is never easy, esp with someone like your dad who is able to handle do much of her personal needs, and does crossword puzzles.
He will resist. Consider how difficult this change is for him, being so independent and the helper to another.
Are you his POA ?
That he would drive without a license is saying a lot - although this is not unusual. (My client called the police on her son - he had to call the police to tell them the situation (dementia, calling AAA to fix the car).
Ultimately, you will need to do what you feel is right although I would caution you to put your anger and frustration aside and do what he needs, even if he kicks and screams. With all this said, I have a client who is now 102 and just stopped driving at age 100. She still lives alone. Very independent.
Consider if possible, getting him a roommate or have a care giver come over regularly, if not daily, to check in on him. Be sure he cannot drive the car; legally he shouldn't be, of course. Although you also do not want to risk him killing or injuring anyone, including himself.
Realize too that you likely cannot 'talk common sense' to him 'anymore'. He will not accept it and you two will end up arguing (or he will / you shouldn't engage in arguing, understanding his frustration). This takes training on your part to step back and hold back when you want to tell him what he needs to hear or argues with you. Sometimes the best you can do is reflective listening and stay neutral. Giving him 2-3 hours of your time per day seems kind to me. I would try to find someone(s) to 'replace' you when you leave / return home.
What are his options? Move into ind living situation? Get someone to move in with him? If you are not his POA, sometimes we need to sit 'and watch' what someone does that is not in their best interest. If you are his POA, you want to do what will keep him safe and realize he will be MAD or upset with you. He will be very frustrated. Ind living / assisted living sounds ideal so he can make new friends. I sense he would quickly being as sharp as he is. Although fighting all the way.

Let me know how it goes.

Gena / Touch Matters
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The driving issue can be very fraught with difficulties. But something in what you're telling us isn't adding up.

- who requested he be given a cognitive test back in 2010? If he failed it why wasn't his license suspended back then?

"The Short Blessed Test (SBT, Data Supplement 1), sometimes called the Orientation-Memory-Concentration Test, is a weighted six-item instrument originally designed to identify dementia.35 The SBT evaluates orientation, registration, and attention. It was originally validated on patients in a skilled nursing facility and active community-dwelling senior citizens. Results were correlated with senile plaque burden on autopsy, but not against biomarkers, amyloid tracer uptake, or performance-based parameters of dementia that have recently been recommended for the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease.1,5  

The SBT has demonstrated excellent reliability with scores generally within four errors of their original score within three weeks of testing."

source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3080244/#:~:text=The%20Short%20Blessed%20Test%20(SBT,originally%20designed%20to%20identify%20dementia.&text=The%20SBT%20evaluates%20orientation%2C%20registration%2C%20and%20attention.

Also, in 2 different medical incidences many years apart the medical staff felt it necessary to give him a cognitive exam. Don't you think there was a reason they'd do this?

I suggest you stop trusting what he is telling you. He may sincerely believe it is true, but sounds inaccurate. This would be a symptom of dementia, as is his obsessing and paranoia, as well as his poor judgment in taking your car and driving with an invalid license. He is 85 and so dementia is certainly possible. I would verify that the info regarding the license suspension is true by calling the PA DMV and then verify what it would take for him to have it reinstated. If it turns out he does need a neuro psych eval, then make sure you go with him and stay in the room and be there when the doctor reviews the results. This is the only way to know for sure what's going on with him. It may be very eye opening for you. It was for me when I did this with my MIL. Once you know with certainty what his cognitive abilities/diagnosis is then you will know what you're dealing with and can make better decisions as you help him.
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Clearwater51 Feb 2022
He was given the test back in 2010 because he and my mother were attempting to get life insurance. She passed. He did not. Why wasn't his license suspended back then? I don't know. Maybe the law has changed since then.

In 2010, it was due to the insurance. In Dec. 2021, I was told, eventually, by the outpatient coordinator that they did it because he displayed behavior that caught their attention. So they say. Granted, I'm not around my dad much but I've talked to many people who are over the past two months and they're stunned. Even a friend who lost her husband years ago to Alzheimer's has told me there is no way my dad has it. And she sees him like 3 times a week.

I've even gone to the length of talking about the book he is reading on his Kindle then going to his Kindle to check to see if remembers what he's reading or is he just making it up. And he is describing the book accurately.

I have verified the info with the DMV and they've actually sent letters to my dad to that effect. He failed a test. If he passes one, his license will be reinstated. And to be clear, it was his car that he took, not my own.

And I agree. There needs to be a witness to the proceedings when the test is done.
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