Yesterday, my 76 y/o mother saw a stack of business cards for the listing agent in a house I've just purchased. The listing agent is a young mom in her 30s.
My mom picked up a card and asked me, "Why are there little pieces of paper with somebody's picture on them in your new house?"
I said they belonged to the agent and that she was coming later today to get all her stuff.
"But who is this person?" my mom asked. "Is it you?"
I said no and laughed because she's not always this loopy. I thought she was joking...until she asked me how to pronounce the agent's name and if she still lived there.
My mother goes to a super-quack naturopath and buys trillions of dollars (not quite) worth of bogus chiropractic treatments, vitamins and supplements, and whose hypochondria has led to her self-diagnose many rare diseases all my life (all without a single medical test!)
Now she is refusing to see a mental health doctor to test her for cognitive impairment, but it is evident to me and my beleaguered step dad who takes care of her. I can see the strain in him, poor guy.
**IS there anything doctors can do to stop the process of dementia? If it is Alzheimer's, is there anything they can do to cure/slow that? Is there any reason to pitch a battle to get her diagnosed?**
Her father spent the last 8 years in a mental care home for seniors because he was completely gone. I hope this isn't my genetic fate too, but for now, I'd just like to help my difficult, opinionated, stubborn mom. Should I try to force her to see a real doctor? She often complains that WE all have mental problems but that she's fine.
Yes, there is certainly a reason to get her diagnosed. You don't know what you're dealing with until you get a diagnosis. Once you have a reason for dementia, you can become educated on its cause and get an idea of what to expect. You can also prepare certain documents such as financial POA, healthcare POA, a living will, etc., if they're not already done.
Having her see a PCP, not the "nature" dr. she goes to, may be easier than asking her to see a mental health dr. Good luck.
I don't think getting a diagnosis changes much. What does matter is whether or not mom can care for herself. Can she dress, bathe, toilet herself? Can she plan and cook a meal, get herself to appointments and manage her money?
In terms of your day to day interactions, have you tried simplifying your language? Your story about the business cards reminded me of something my mom used to do. Everytime she got in my car, she would see the little slips of paper that you get from the parking kiosk in MYC which you leave in your windshield to indicate you've paid your fee. My mother would "I hope those aren't parking tickets!". I would explain what they were and she would repeat "I hope they're not parking tickets!" I had to work out a VERY simple explanation and even then, she asked this question every time she got in my car!