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My 102 year old mother is living at home. I am her POA and proxy. The last two years have been a nightmare. She has fallen several times with serious injuries from three falls. She came home from a several month rehab knowing she needed help at home. She kicked them out on the third day. All of the services, VNA, Caretakers, have said she shouldn’t be at home alone. I talk until I am blue in the face. She won’t listen telling me she has to die at home where her husband died. It was recommended I get her a medical alert pendant. In the last month she has set it off 21 times. She fools with it while wearing it or let’s it hang from her walker. It thinks she is falling. I get calls from them day and night. Sometimes she answers the phone and others she ignores it. Last week we had agreed she should go to assisted living. A nurse came to visit and assess her. I went and made all the arrangements and then yesterday she tells me she won’t go. If I make her she says she will make a scene and get kicked out. She acted out at the rehab too. They couldn’t wait to be rid of her. What good does it do to be a POA or proxy ? I can’t physically force her to leave the house. I have called adult services and they were no help at all. I don’t know what to do. I wanted to resign as POA and proxy,but mom’s attorney asked me to continue. I can’t keep living like this.

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Eventually, if she keeps falling, she will sustain a serious injury and the rehab or hospital will refuse to release her they will file for emergency guardianship in necessary.

Stop showing up at the ER might be a plan
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My mother fought my brother and I on every turn, she refused to sell her house, she refused to have any help, she refused to go into AL...so we just waited...2 months ago she had a slight stroke, she was afraid to stay alone and was having panic attacks...we sprung...she is now in AL, near us in Fl, she was living alone in NC. We will return in March and clean out her house and put it up for sale. She will turn 95 in February.

Perhaps you will need to do what we did. Keep posting it will help!
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So she makes a scene...then what? YOU REFUSE to take her into your home, and they will have to find a facility. Set the boundary and stand firm. Remember, as much as you say you can’t force her to leave, she can’t force you to keep her.

Good luck.
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JoAnn29 Jan 2020
ALs are not responsible to find her a facility. Its private pay and considered a residence. The ones in my area do not provide a SW. Just an RN on duty and aides.
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If you give up the POA, you still will worry about Mom. The POA only gives you the ability to help not the ability to force her to do anything. You still will have to deal with her stubborness.

My MIL lived in FL 20 years before her death. FIL died 17 years before her. When DH retired, the phone calls usually were "u need to move down here". Then she came up one time saying she was thinking of moving back. We went thru looking at apts and trailers with her but she never moved back. When she said something to me about moving down, I told her it would never happen because I had my Mom. My husband never gave in to her. He told me she chose to move to Fla. She wanted to stay in that house. That was her decision and if she died in that house, that too was her decision.

So, seems Mom has done OK for 102. And if this is where she wants to stay then let her. And if she dies because she stayed in her house, then she did it her way. POA does not mean you have to do for her. Doesn't mean ur at her beck and call. Might want to tell her what u will and won't do. Otherwise, she pays to have it done.
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Has your mother been found to be incompetent?

If so, your durable poa and healthcarenpoa may well give you the right to place her in a secure memory care unit.

Has she been seen by a geriatric psychiatrist? Although meds cant reverse dementia, they can often reduce the paranoia, agitation and anxiety that often accompany it.

If the lawyer has any standing with mom (i.e., she trusts him) pay him the hourly rate for mom to visit him. Let HIM explain that shes acting irrationally. It's worth a shot.
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Resign -
Resign
Resign

Then let the chips fall where they may. Your mom, if she is of sound mind (and no court has declared her incompetent) cannot be forced into anything she does not wish to do. But that doesn't mean you by default are the cleaner upper.

Step back - let her figure it out. Then a medical emergency will force the issue - as it has for so many families on this site with stubborn elders.
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Isthisrealyreal Jan 2020
Totally agree.

Tell the attorney that they are welcome to the position.
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My take on PoA is that it's agreement that has to work for both parties. If your mom has dementia/cognitive issues and isn't making rational decisions in her own best interest, then you should have her go into the facility whether she's on board or not. Falling and hurting herself over and over is irrational. She's not independent by any means. Having people orbit around her false alarms and self-inflicted injuries is also irrational. I agree with the observation below that even if you resign your PoA you will still worry about her. But going forward you will need to choose the lesser of the 2 evils of resigning or staying. But if I were you I'd have a final discussion with her pointing out the selfishness of her jerking people around because she has some entrenched notion about her final days. Please inform her that she most likely won't "die in the house" since she will probably fall and if she doesn't die, she'll be in a hospital or facility anyway. Then if she's still resistant, sign her up and get her in or just resign. Also, please inform her of how things will go if you resign (she either becomes a ward of the county and they certainly won't tolerate being jerked around and you won't be able to rescue her, or the attorney will probably put her in a facility as that person surely won't have the time to be jerked around). Good luck!
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Good for her, still feisty at 102.
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JoAnn29 Jan 2020
I guess u do know ur comments aren't appreciated.
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I wonder if she wants to die in the same bed or chair that her husband died in , if that could be a compromise. If so, you could make sure that goes to AL with her. My Mom was very resistant to move in with me until my brother figured out it was more about keeping her kitchen table! ( which was handed down from her mother) rather than staying in her house per se. Once I told her we'd make room for it she stopped dragging her feet. I know it's crazy but that was the deal breaker and even she didn't even know it.
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My husband who had Alzheimer's had 3 bad falls in 2 days. I had his case worker reassess him. She put him on the critical list for long term care and in 2 weeks they had a bed for him. I didn't discuss it with him. He thought he was going to his Day Program. I just took him there and they were very good about settling him in. He is very happy there and as I couldn't leave him while I was caring for him , I now have a life.
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