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I have been really sick with food poisoning the last couple of days and I usually keep the house clean and I usually will put out things that my mom needs in bright containers on the counter to make it easier for the caregiver to get to.
I'm starting to feel better and I had come back from a doctor's appointment and my mom told me that caregiver was complaining about how messy the kitchen was and she couldn't find anything as a result she just gave my mom whatever. My mom is on a strict diet and there are some things she cannot have. So my mom said that she had talked to the caregiver, calmly and explained to her that I had been sick and asked if she had looked at the containers and that she was there to help my Mom. The caregiver said, ''I didn't see anything.''
Do I need to talk to the caregiver when I see her or just let it go and see if happens again?

Does your mother have dementia? If so then take anything she says with a grain of salt and don't necessarily assume the caregiver is the one being rude or saying anything. I was an in-home caregiver for 25 years and now have a homecare agency. So I know how easily a care client might make a big deal out of absolutely nothing. Like the client imagined something then convinces themselves it happened. Their caregiver took a "snotty" tone of voice with them. The caregiver had a "dirty" look on their face. This nonsense will be amplified a hundred fold when you're dealing with a bored senior.

Maybe your mother wanted a certain food and the caregiver didn't see it in any of the containers, then your mother got cranky about not getting the food she wanted. This is not only a possibility but also a probability. I did this work for a long time and the caregiver usually gets blamed when the client gets a bee in their bonnet over nothing.

Talk to the caregiver without your mother present and ask her what happened. Then let her explain.
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Reply to BurntCaregiver
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All I will say is choose your battles wisely as good in-home caregivers are hard to come by.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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Does your Mom like the caregiver otherwise? In fairness, your illness and inability to help out by setting things up made her job more difficult and it's human nature to complain. Everybody has a bad day once in a while. At the same time, your mother seems to be losing her filter a little bit, which is very common, even in elders who are competent. Most people would not mention the unkind comments so as to not hurt your feelings.

You employ this caregiver for your mother's benefit, not for someone to validate your feelings. I'd go by my assessment of whether she's a good fit in general for Mom and treats her well, and if so, overlook this incident.
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Reply to iameli
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Your mom's caregiver is a mandated reporter. If she sees things of concern to her she not only CAN report them, but she is mandated to do so. We can have no idea the level of problems she witnessed it or what she said or did about it. But just letting you know the status of things. I would discuss all this with HER, not us. Sorry you were feeling unwell and are better. Best of luck. A home usually doesn't deteriorate in a two day problem of illness to any worrisome degree--perhaps this is the warning to keep things up, and keep emergency supplies. You can never tell when you'll eat a bad oyster.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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First red flag is that she gave your mom "whatever", that is unacceptable, the strict diet your mom is on is the key, as a good caregiver would not do that. The fact that this caregiver is complaining or gossiping with the person she cares for is very Unprofessional and to me, sounds like an excuse not to do a good job. I think that a caregiver that establishes a relationship with the one that they care for based on gossip and alienating the family is a very bad choice. I wouldn't allow that to continue. I would interview other people and find someone who has more integrity and respect to be honest. Just to be transparent, I am a caregiver, and no one has a perfect house especially when they are in the position that you are in when you are trying to take care of two households, your own and your moms. I wish you the best in navigating this challenging situation. You'll make the right decision.
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Reply to Anniemc
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Is it okay? You obviously don't think so.

I can totally see how a comment, that wasn't meant to be critical, was taken by your mom as being so. Not saying it wasn't but you can not know.

I want to caution you to NOT take your moms word as your battle cry. You just CAN NOT fully trust that what is being said has the same tone, is in context or is what was actually said. Dementia distorts reality, we have to tread lightly and carefully before reacting to what they perceived happened.

Trust but verify should be how all Dementia interactions are dealt with, those that matter anyway.
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Reply to Isthisrealyreal
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First, is your mom reliable? My mother with dementia isn't and will lie lie lie. But if you trust that what your mom is saying is true, I'd ask the caregiver about the comments. Unless I was really satisfied with the answer, I'd tell her she wasn't coming back. But again, it depends how reliable your mom is. Personally, I have zero tolerance for a caregiver or anyone I'm paying to work to give me nonsense. Our lives are stressful enough caring for a loved one who needs care. I have no problem calling the agency and telling them "this one isn't coming back because of ____."
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Reply to Jacquelinezr
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Foamergirl Aug 3, 2025
Wish I had your courage. I spoke up and lost.
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Choose your battles. Right.
Good caregivers are a needle in a haystack to find. Agencies can't get workers. Despite their contracts promising all sorts of nice assistance, we are supposed to be satisfied paying top dollar for "No one died" every day. Or "at least they showed up."
Could they not have called and asked for clarification as to what food to feed? No. They dont even ask when you ate in the same house woth them. I was at the house today, outside doing yardwork, for one cg shift. The caregiver goes to leave for the day, tells me there are two Tylenol under my mom's bed, they don't know why. Okay.... she probably dropped them. Did the cargiver at least pick them up? No. I had to do that. When they came on shift w me in the house, did they check w me before giving her Tylenol? No. All but over dosed her because gave too soon for next dose. I'm in the freaking house at that point. You couldn't check with me?
They can't put the used bathtowels etc in the hamper. Leave them hanging on the drying rack... for DAYS.
You can leave a can of soup, in the bowl you want used, w spoon and specific instructions on how to heat for lunch and they will feed something completely different. And you're not allowed to complain because YOU are the problem. You loved one is lovely and everyone loves them. Yeah. B/c they aren't aware enough of what's going on to be outraged as they would be in their right mind.
And no, this is not my first agency. They are all the same where we live... assuming they even have staff.
Private care is no better and less reliable in my experience, although cheaper, but not insured and you likely can't get a tax deduction for the expense b/c private always want paid in cash under the table. And you need private as backups for the agency calloffs.

So yes, I agree they should NOT complain about your house. Or maybe they could HELP with it.

But in today's world, many of us have to put up with a ton of unacceptable to get care for our loved ones while we work. None of my friends or family can imagine how I can put up with it these last two years. I have learned to mostly ignore their notes. I mostly don't watch camera footage.... except I noticed while at work this last Monday that not many camera alerts were coming through. Turned out Mom was in bed w her tablet and caregiver was on her phone (talking) on the front porch for an HOUR. They lied and said they took my mom on the porch for sitting. Three cameras would have showed my mom going out onto the porch. None of them did.

But if I complain, I don't have a caregiver and I can't go to work.
Yes, there are things that I would draw the line at.
But the more I watch and see how awful these people are, the more stressful for me. And it will not be corrected. The agencies aren't going to correct their people because the people will quit and they won't have staff to send to your house. And that is today's reality, esp when there is no direct supervision.

It's not fair, it's not right. But for your own mental well being, and ability to continue being a caregiver, please try to let it go. Our loved ones are still better off being at home with us, when they have us, than they would be in a N home where there is not enough staff to spend real time w them, no matter how caring the staff are. Not enough staff to 'encourage' eating a few bites over the several hours it takes to complete a meal, or to do some exercises to stay strong enough to walk to bathroom toilet, or drink enough sips of liquid to not get dehydrated and have to go to hosp and lose ground on the mental acuity. The end will come much much faster in a N Home. So I continue to do what I must to be able to endure the home care nightmare. So my 94 yo mom can stay in her home as requested. I realize many would not go to the lengths I have done to do so. And I might not forever .... I can't see doing it another 6 years..... but for now, I can endure some more.
Best of luck to you.
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Reply to Kermit
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Foamergirl Aug 3, 2025
Oh my gosh how much I appreciate this Kermit! I’ve been dealing with these similar issues and more for six plus years! And yes, told I am the problem. Thank you for letting me know I am not alone!
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If this care giver gave her the wrong food, then that was a very bad decision.
What is going to happen if the caregiver can't think on her feet in an emergency??
When would she call the ambulance or Doctor? Is she responsible for administration meds?
I have a dear friend who has been a care giver for years. In a case like this she would tidy up the kitchen counter and look for the food that she has been giving your mother during pasts visits... Not hand her whatever.

I hope you can find a better trained and caring care giver.
I wish you and your mother the best
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Reply to liz1906
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As a home health aid for 30 years plus I'm going to say this... I have been exposed to black mold and people with c-diff, and Covid, lice, bed bugs and each time I was not told about this and neither was my home health agency. Yes, to a certain degree we are expecting a certain level of safety and cleanliness.

One wife let me know within 5 minutes after my arrival that I was to do everything her husband was doing and is not now able to do. This meant mowing their lawn and pulling the weeds in over 100° weather! They had well over 1 acre. She would not allow me to do anything for husband who was my patient and his VA benefits were paying for me to be there. They had bought this house their dream home 2 years before and within one year he was totally disabled. She obviously could not keep up with this place and so I was expected to take the place of her husband taking care of this place and that meant oiling all the woodwork, get the ladder out of the garage bring it into the house take down all 46 light bulbs from huge chandeliers over the dining room table, wash them along with the Globes and then replace every one. Take down all the stuff in the living room and in the kitchen that's up on top of cabinets, go wash them in the kitchen rinse them, dry them and put them all back up. I was going up and down a ladder and yes I did this as stupid as it was because I need the money and try to find an honest client is pretty hard to do as well as you guys trying to find an honest caregiver. I just got another new patient and they want me to come work for them on the sly under the table and I told them no. They did not fire me. Probably because they were afraid I would let my agency know what they were up to. I explained to her that the reason they know about me is because of my agency otherwise I wouldn't be here. And so-called Christians are the worst. I just told a veteran the other day that I'm not going to lie in my notes and tell my agency I gave him a shower when I did not. He ordered me to lie in my notes! He actually ordered me to do that and we get treated like we are scum of the earth sometimes . When I tell him I do not lie it made him very angry so he starts yelling at me. I let him know that's abuse and that only made him angrier!!! I reported him to the agency and I don't know if we have him anymore. I'm thankful my agency doesn't put up with this junk.
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Reply to DonnaF777
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Greeneyes60 Aug 1, 2025
I'm offended that you would refer to so-called Christians. I'm a Christian. As Christians, we should show kindness and respect to those around us.
There are many people who do not respect what you do. If you're happy with your agency, that's awesome. I did hire someone from an agency to assist my father. She was not being paid very much, yet she worked extremely hard. Of course, she was not doing manual labor jobs around the house. I was willing to pay her higher wages with my father's VA benefit.
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