My mother's health has been declining since she fell and broke her ribs in February. A trip to the ER revealed a blood clot in her lungs. Not to mention she has lost so much of her body weight. She insists on coming home and I know I can't take care of her now. It has been a struggle up to now just trying to get her to eat.
I've got a couple of days to make a decision. This is hard and I just need to release this pain I am feeling. I didn't know this was coming my way. This is too much. Comments please.
Anyway, approx 2 months in, he finally admitted to my son that "it's easier for us here (but don't tell your mother)".
And as far as "dying at home", yea that didn't happen either - it is pretty rare to die in your home - he contracted pneumonia, went to the hospital and never left.
My point is - as we get older, we sometimes lose sight of what is best for us and make poor choices simply to retain the illusion of independence.
If you haven’t already done so, sit down with the hospital team, and look at what the other options are in your area.
NO NO and NO. Do not bring her home.
Get her into rehab or a nursing home.
She will insist anyway - no matter what you do as she is scared and wants what she is familiar with - you and being home. However, what she needs is very different from (her fears driving her) what she needs.
You HAVE to take care of yourself. Otherwise, you won't be able to care for her as you crumble / potentially have a breakdown. You are grieving. Get into therapy or find a grief therapist to help you sort out your feelings. It is a very difficult time and you need at the support you can get.
Gena / Touch Matters
Home is our familiar place.
Unfortunately, for your mother, if she does not have someone to provide the care she needs, she can not go home. You have to make this clear to her doctor, the one who will give the discharge orders.
She should be transferred to a skilled nursing facility/rehab. That is considered a short-term stay, pending the progress made by the patient. If the patient is no longer making progress - that is, getting better and able to go home, then she will need to be transferred to a long term care facility.
You say you can't take care of her now. Does she have the means to hire full-time care in her home? There are live-in care providers, or she could hire caregivers to come in shifts as needed.
You need to tell her, without hesitation, that you are not able to provide the care she will need at home. She may want to pressure you, only because that is the easiest path for her. She needs to understand that it is beyond your capability, and you can help guide her toward a more feasible option.
I'm so sorry you are going through this pain. You have watched your mother decline, and I'm sure you instinctively know that she will only continue to decline.
She could make a remarkable recovery, but that is not likely.
my wife is in her late stages of dementia, i have been caring for her since day one. I'm retired navy with good health/medicine coverage, so i can afford this life style. just don't have any fun money. i have set my house up just for her to be safe. a lot of changes to the house though. all very in-expensive. with all this and an abundance of required patience and love, it works for us. I'm able to keep a smile on her face every day. yes its a lot of work but i love her that much. besides, i can not afford the in home care or any other paying care.
so the question is how much do you love your parents.
Because as you are well aware, caregiving for someone with any of the dementias is the hardest job we will ever do, and it's not for everyone.
Plus caregiving for a spouse is WAY different than caring for a parent. To our spouse most of us vowed to be with them in the good times and bad, in sickness and health until death do us part.
That is not the case with parents. We as adults owe them nothing. And most children have their own children that they're still raising or at least are still working(and needing to work)and are not able to give all that up to care for their parent.
And for those that can...good for them, but again it has NOTHING to do with how much one loves or doesn't love their parents, but if the caregiving situation works for ALL involved. And yes, that means the caregiver too.
I too cared for my late husband with vascular dementia at home until his death in 2020, and I would never try and make anyone feel bad if they couldn't do all that caregiving entails because it is a lot, and it is NOT for everyone.
So yes, I took offense to your last sentence, as we on this forum are here to encourage other caregivers whether they keep their loved ones at home or have no choice but to place them in a facility. And the last thing a caregiver still in the throes of caregiving needs is to be made to feel guilty over the choices they make in their individual situation.
We all just do the very best we can, and that just has to be good enough.
So I'll say it one last time...it has nothing to do with how much we love the person needing care.
You did not cause the aging process and you will not stop the aging process. You’re doing your best be kind to yourself and do what’s best for your mother..
Hope you can take a day or two to go see qualified Medicare and Medicaid (M/M) Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) which have a M/M qualified rehab unit. That is where she needs to go next. To rebab first (Medicare will pay for some of this) and once Medicare stops, she can pay privately to "spend down" to later qualify to Medicaid.
If you do not have a licensed elder care attorney working with you/her; find one asap as they can help w/all of this. Further, they will know the best M/M qualified facilities to look at and they often have great relationships with the "business office" staff at such facilities which can help "grease the skids" to get into the best facilities.
Have the attorney review any paper work as there are trick questions, such as "if she does NOT qualify to Medicaid, YOU will personally pay or take her back." Sounds terrible, but YOU MUST NOT signed in agreement to this. It is the facilities responsibility to make a "safe discharge" if needed, NOT YOU!!!!
If you do not already have access online to all her accounts (Social Security, Medicare, banks, IRA/retirement, tax filings get that) as if she needs Medicaid long term care coverage at some point AFTER spending down; you will need access to all of her records going back FIVE YEARS! Lots of paperwork to gather, the attorney can help you.
YES, once you know the best 1 or 2 facilities: tell the social worker at the hospital 1) "it is NOT a safe discharge" (key legal words) for her to be sent home, 2) that no one including YOU can care for her at her home, and 3) here are the first and second choice of a M/M qualified facility she needs to be discharged to their "Medicare qualified rehab unit." Again, an elder care attorney can help with this.
Hope you have a POA, are named as her "health agent" and have other legal documents in order to take over. To get access to her accounts, you'll need a non-springing POA (lawyer can explain).
Good luck with this. But YES she needs to be in a facility moving forward.
Really you have already made your decision: "I can't take care of her right now."
If you can't do that now, you won't be able to do it day in day out either.
Please think of this as you doing what's in your mum's best interests, even if she doesn't see it that way. That's the truth.
When she says she wants to go home and not to rehab, you'll be able to say "I know Mom. Sorry but the doc says you need rehab."
Sorry you're going through this.
Of course she wants to go home, but she does not understand why it’s not the best option for either of you.
I assure you taking her home will inevitably land her right back in the hospital, and a vicious cycle will continue.
You love her enough to give her the best care, and you cannot do that yourself.
If you stand your ground and make sure they understand that you CANNOT take care of her, they will have no choice but to get her placed.
And then you can get back to just being your mothers child and advocate and not her overwhelmed and burned out caregiver, and your mother will receive the care she now requires.
It will be a win win for all involved.
Can you let us know if you are open to having her placed?