My mother is 89 years old. She can no longer take care of herself. She is blind in one eye and can't see very well with the other. My brother and I and a friend spends hours a day ensuring that she gets at least one nutritional meal a day and make sure that she has food for other meals. We occasionally find her on the floor. My brother and I both work full time jobs and it's very hard to go over and take care of her. She won't let us help bathe her. She won't let anybody else in her house to help her. I'm afraid that if she won't let us help her that her hygiene will be impacted. She has a very good appetite when we are there. We just cannot help her the amount of hours that are needed. If we were able to get support, how do we pay the people that come in? I heard it's very expensive. She refuses to go to a facility also.
I’m sure she doesn’t want to move into assisted living, but she can’t call the shots anymore. She is not able to care for herself and not able to make good decisions anymore.
If you can hire aides to come in to help mom, she'd pay them from her funds directly. If she's low income, apply for Medicaid on her behalf.
Mom should obviously not be living alone anymore. You can also call APS to report a vulnerable and mostly blind senior living alone who's prone to falls. They can evaluate the situation and place her as well.
Best of luck to you.
If your mother will not go into care, and if APS says she has a right to her own decisions regarding this I would tell her you will not be helping her any more. I would give her the phone number to ambulance to admit herself if she is unable to act for herself and I would agree to install a safety system to assess daily for falls. But I would do nothing else until she recognizes she cannot act on her own, and you will not help.
I am sorry to seem so brutal, but as long as you do everything she will not change her mind. You may decide to leave her be. At that point you will get the call from coroner or ambulance company of hospital ER and you can have Social Workers act for her and in her behalf. There are many seniors across the country without children. You will have to let your Mom know if she isn't cooperative with safe placement, she will be in their same position.
At some point in life, our unrealistic choices are no longer our own choice; and if they ARE, they may kill us. Some would prefer to leave the house feet first than have another year or two in a nursing home. I am not certain but that I don't agree with that thinking myself.
We introduced a personal care aide in stages.
Step 1. 3 days a week, 1/2 day mornings. The first day, I stayed the entire session. The 2nd day, I left after 2 hours. The 3rd day I didn't come at all. 6 weeks after we started this arrangement, Mom fainted at the breakfast table. THANK GOD the aide was there.
We are now up to 7 days a week 1/2 mornings. (Mom is now legally blind, stage 5 dementia). Mom has 3 regularly scheduled aides to help her. They take good care of them, and she is unfailingly polite to them, and overall, much more cooperative (on a regular basis) than with us, her adult children!. At first the personal care aide was paid for out of a senior program funded by our city.
This year I was finally able to get her qualified for Medicaid, which allow us to go from 5 days a week to 7 days a week.
I am currently working to get 20 more additional hours per week so that Mon-Fri Mom will have care 8:30-4:30pm, and 1/2 days on the weekends.
Sell her house and use that money to pay for it .
Do not use your own money to pay for a care aide at home either.
You may find someone that she really likes. You never know until you try.
You don't mention her having dementia, so I'm going to assume that the three of you (yourself, your brother, and your mother) can sit down together and speak like reasonable adults. Let her know that she needs a lot of help and you and your brother can't provide all of it. Tell her that nothing will get an elder a one-way ticket to a nursing home faster than being stubborn. So if she's going to persist witht the stubbornness of not allowing anyone into the home to help and fighting you and your brother every step of the way, then it's just a matter of time before she has another fall and gets placed by the state. It will not be her choice then and will get done against her will. So the stubbornness has to go.
If she doesn't have dementia, she can be left alone for periods of time if she's willing to stay put and watch tv. Or take a nap. I've had clients who were fall risks but did not have dementia. They would be set up in a downstairs room with the phone, tv, laptop, snacks, drinks, and a portable commode next to their chair. They would not get up and walk around until their aide arrived or a family member. Some although still able to walk but a fall risk, would get around their homes in a wheelchair if no one was there.
If your mother doesn't have dementia her remaining home can be possible.
You have received a good range of advice. The only things I can add are as follows. Consider working with a geriatric care manager, but check what they offer and how payment works first in a consultation call.
If you find her on the floor and call 911, hopefully from there you could get a dementia diagnosis and have her transferred to a Medicaid accepting facility, if she has no funds to pay. Whether you or your brother have POA or not— my question is, is she in a fit state to call a lawyer about it? What would a lawyer say? I wonder whether she would be considered a danger to herself.
Even if you don’t get a dementia diagnosis, is anyone else (doctor, social worker, geriatric care manager) going to tell you she is fit to be sent alone back to her own home?
Who is paying her bills and filing her taxes and such? Assuming you or your brother, you should have access to her bank account and therefore knowledge of her monthly income and assets.
Is she in danger or setting fire to the house, leaving the water on and starting a flood, leaving the door wide open all night, giving all her money to a scammer?
as I’m sure you realize, her condition is going to get worse. More falls for example, and therefore ongoing risk or broken bones, gashes, concussions, etc.
You could also maybe put cameras in her house so you can monitor if she falls or has some other accident. Obviously you can’t be monitoring it and running over there at every hour of the day or night. So it’s not really a fix.
I feel for you and wish you the best!
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