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I am my dad's POA,

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What I meant to say above was that he currently lives in an assisted living and wants to come back to his home and take care of himself with the help of help at home girls. He needs to stay at the assisted living because he's legally blind has had a stroke has diabetic retinopathy neuropathy, he can hardly walk a straight line, I'm worried about him doing his meds right and yes I live close but we have a very strained relationship and this is something I cannot take on myself. Before the stroke his home was infested with bedbugs for six months, we paid for the spraying but it didn't work... the trailer was a piece of crap...holes in the floor, mice infested If it wasn't for the stroke he probably be still living there with the Bug's While in the hospital with a stroke I found a bedbug nest and his hat ..they were in his shoes and on the collar of his shirt. There was even one crawling on the bed sheet which I had to report to the nurse so everything and everybody who came and went was quarantined So yeah he wants to come back to his new little cabin we build him after we destroyed the trailer and I am pretty sure the mess is going to start all over again
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His neurologist just to test him on his follow up and said he was mildly cognitive impaired, his general practitioner always give him a pass saying he's basically OK to go
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Is there any reason you built him a new place to live? When he was living in the bed bug infested house previously, he showed no ability to look out for his own safety and welfare. So, I"m not sure what kind of doctor thinks that's acceptable. I would suspect that other doctors or professional mental health professionals would be highly suspect that he is okay to make his housing safe.

I can't comment on whether you might get into trouble by allowing him to go home. Just because the doctors don't seem to have a handle on his abilities, I'd hesitate to join them. I'd see an attorney for advice.
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Dear Bella,

I hear you and its a tough situation. I know as your dad's POA you want to do what is best for him. Its always tough with our elderly parents. If it were me and given what happened in the past, I think it would be safer to have him live in a good assisted living facility instead.

It sounds like his care is escalating. He needs more supervision. Even though the doctors have cleared him, it sounds like your gut is telling you that maybe he shouldn't be able to go back home. I know its not an easy decision. I'm the kind of person that always does what someone else wants. Even with my own dad, I tried to do what he wanted but in the end I feel like I hurt him. I shouldn't have let him have his way. I feel like if he was properly supervised he would still be alive. Instead I let him come home and I wasn't prepared for what that looked like. I thought I could take care of him. In hindsight it was too much.

Maybe get a social worker to talk to him about all his options.
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I think I'd ask those docs to put in writing that he is capable of living alone with no supervision. Make it clear to them that you intend to resign your POA because it gives you no authority to force your dad to take care of himself. It only gives you the authority to carry out his wishes. And if he wishes to live in a bedbug infested home, you have no ability to control that.

You are going to have to be tough here, Bella, and possibly talk back to people in authority. " No, I couldn't possibly do that", is a useful phrase.
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Has your dad had a neuropsycological evaluation? It's quite involved, but, unless the neurologist has that kind of test done, I'd question his opinion on your dad's competence.

I'd also talk to the staff at the facility to see what kind of help dad needs. Like does he need help with bathing, grooming, laundry, meals, taking medication, etc? He may need help with his daily activities. If he is blind, how to they anticipate him being able to read drug labels and instructions?
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We built him a little "cabin-like" house. Only because we had to destroy his trailer and most everything in it. My husband and told him he was sorry but we have to do this and I will build you something no, which we have tried for years to put him up something new but he would not let go of his dumpy trailer. He went on respite care at the assisted living and it is now six months and he has gotten better from the stroke, and I honestly thought he would not come out of this so I didn't worry much about him wanting to come back home to his cabin . My husband at first help to get his butt out and a few things wearing a hazmat outfit, I totally disagreed with him even going in there for fear of bringing Bug's home to our house. I made him strip down completely outside in the middle of January freezing ice and snow and destroyed all his clothes and we ended up getting bedbugs in our living room. I found a nest in the recliner which my husband sits and every night, I totally freaked out and destroyed all of our furniture it was extremely costly for spraying but we caught them in the nick of time. My dad had no problem with us paying for six months of spraying his trailer but he would not allow any other help, he wasn't doing with the bug man ask him to do on his part as far as washing his clothes correctly destroying things etc. Plus he's legally blind so he could not see how bad they were even though he was told!!!! Yes his care is escalating, he's recovering from a foot ulcer and to a diabetic that is not good. I love and appreciate all your suggestions and I will try all of them. My dad can't read medicine bottles or anything really. He won't let them assist with his showers, but then again he's that type a old man that doesn't mind being dirty and stinky and dirty clothes
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I am ready to give up being POA. he just had a follow up at the neurologist and did some little test maybe eight questions and all the doctor said was mildly impaired
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