Anonymous wrote:Op, she is mentally ill. How are you going to deal with it? Get guardianship, make decisions. Step up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like she has a lot of health anxiety as well and is dealing with it in a BPD way. Hospital plus multiple referrals sounds like something could really be wrong. If she struggles to manage distress, the idea of a serious medical illness is very distressing.
Since you are obviously her POA since her docs office called you, why don't you make the appointments for her and then encourage her to attend. She may choose to go or not go. Or maybe focus first just on one referral, multiple appointments may be too overwhelming. Ignore the ranting, you know that is going to come whenever she is in a difficult scenario and her anxiety is .
Chronic physical illness goes hand in hand with chronic mental illness. Many people with chronic mental illness die from physical illness due to the lack of self care and lack of adherence to treatment. The mental illness leads to worsening physical illnesses.
POA = power of attorney? I do not have PoA. I think I’m the emergency contact because no one else in the family is speaking to her.
Unfortunately, making the appointments for her will lead to me being at fault for her problems, and she won’t be any more likely to show up for an appointment. Enabling her helplessness is a slippery slope. I’ve BTDT.
Then what they did is against the law... They cannot disclose her private health information to you. If they are that concerned, they need to call adult protective services or have her admitted.
I think you’re confused about HIPAA works. If you give the doctor permission to speak to someone, they can discuss health information you’ve authorized them to divulge. It only requires a signed authorization.
Anonymous wrote:Repeat this mantra: "I did not cause this. I can't cure it. I can't control it."
Of course it is upsetting, however. Use good self care and therapy, if needed, to manage the stress that this puts on you. You might also find the forum at outofthefog.net helpful; it's a site where the loved ones of personality disordered individuals support each other. Stories like yours are fairly common there.
You can try to help your mother prioritize just one thing she will do to take care of herself. See if she will make the first medical appointment and follow through. The excuses are exactly that, excuses. While she is mentally ill, she is certainly aware enough to understand the consequences of her actions, though we all know that she will blame others for those consequences, regardless.
Medical providers often contact family members for help. In typical families this isn't unreasonable. In families with personality disorders, it's complicated. You can't make your mom do anything. You can offer sympathy to the doctors that you understand their frustration, and you can also set a boundary for yourself that you can only get involved at a certain level.
Anonymous wrote:OP, this sucks. And unfortunately nothing will make it change. You’ll just be banging your head against a wall.
I have a close friend who went through this with her mother and to save her sanity, my friend had to throw up her hands and give up. At a certain point state (or local?) senior services had to step in. It wasn’t easy for my friend to watch her mother deteriorate. This women was also living in deteriorating residential circumstances, as her mother was paranoid and wouldn’t pay the electric bill (“they” we’re watching her through the outlets), and her well wasn’t working so she didn’t have water. My friend had set up a generator and was hauling water to her weekly. It was an impossible situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like she has a lot of health anxiety as well and is dealing with it in a BPD way. Hospital plus multiple referrals sounds like something could really be wrong. If she struggles to manage distress, the idea of a serious medical illness is very distressing.
Since you are obviously her POA since her docs office called you, why don't you make the appointments for her and then encourage her to attend. She may choose to go or not go. Or maybe focus first just on one referral, multiple appointments may be too overwhelming. Ignore the ranting, you know that is going to come whenever she is in a difficult scenario and her anxiety is .
Chronic physical illness goes hand in hand with chronic mental illness. Many people with chronic mental illness die from physical illness due to the lack of self care and lack of adherence to treatment. The mental illness leads to worsening physical illnesses.
POA = power of attorney? I do not have PoA. I think I’m the emergency contact because no one else in the family is speaking to her.
Unfortunately, making the appointments for her will lead to me being at fault for her problems, and she won’t be any more likely to show up for an appointment. Enabling her helplessness is a slippery slope. I’ve BTDT.
Then what they did is against the law... They cannot disclose her private health information to you. If they are that concerned, they need to call adult protective services or have her admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like she has a lot of health anxiety as well and is dealing with it in a BPD way. Hospital plus multiple referrals sounds like something could really be wrong. If she struggles to manage distress, the idea of a serious medical illness is very distressing.
Since you are obviously her POA since her docs office called you, why don't you make the appointments for her and then encourage her to attend. She may choose to go or not go. Or maybe focus first just on one referral, multiple appointments may be too overwhelming. Ignore the ranting, you know that is going to come whenever she is in a difficult scenario and her anxiety is .
Chronic physical illness goes hand in hand with chronic mental illness. Many people with chronic mental illness die from physical illness due to the lack of self care and lack of adherence to treatment. The mental illness leads to worsening physical illnesses.
POA = power of attorney? I do not have PoA. I think I’m the emergency contact because no one else in the family is speaking to her.
Unfortunately, making the appointments for her will lead to me being at fault for her problems, and she won’t be any more likely to show up for an appointment. Enabling her helplessness is a slippery slope. I’ve BTDT.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like she has a lot of health anxiety as well and is dealing with it in a BPD way. Hospital plus multiple referrals sounds like something could really be wrong. If she struggles to manage distress, the idea of a serious medical illness is very distressing.
Since you are obviously her POA since her docs office called you, why don't you make the appointments for her and then encourage her to attend. She may choose to go or not go. Or maybe focus first just on one referral, multiple appointments may be too overwhelming. Ignore the ranting, you know that is going to come whenever she is in a difficult scenario and her anxiety is .
Chronic physical illness goes hand in hand with chronic mental illness. Many people with chronic mental illness die from physical illness due to the lack of self care and lack of adherence to treatment. The mental illness leads to worsening physical illnesses.