Anonymous wrote:Tell her it’s a temporary stay at first. You are going out of town or something like that. Then, she never leaves.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve reframed my thinking as a caregiver that an important goal is helping the person with dementia feel like themselves without disease as much as possible. To that end, “denial” is a very powerful medicine. When you’re able to create a safe, comfortable moment for the person denial can step in and erase for them the holes and the inabilities and in their head, they’re just eating chips and watching tv as their full self. They don’t notice that they can’t remember who is sitting next to them or why the living room looks different.
I agree with the others to let go of logical persuasion completely. It’s not the goal any more.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have medical/durable power of attorney? Does she have money to pay for care? If so, just do it.
Another route is ER and then don’t let them release her home. Work with the social worker to find a place.
Anonymous wrote:My mom needs to go to assisted living. She has dementia and is a fall risk. However, she is in denial about everything. Won't accept she has dementia, doesn't see herself as a risk. She is just nasty and I don't want her around my kids anymore. How do we get her to actually move to the assisted living facility? She is with us now b/c she can't live alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not accepting that she has dementia is part of having dementia. It's normal.
This, with dementia, she doesn't understand or remember.
Anonymous wrote:Not accepting that she has dementia is part of having dementia. It's normal.