Anonymous wrote:Siblings A-D want their elderly parent cared for at home. That’s what the elderly parent wants. They all put in a lot of work at the parent’s house. The parent has a daytime helper (30 hours) but is often alone at night and they all coordinate visits on weekends. Sibling E wants the parent in a nursing home. E is in the medical profession and sees that the elderly parent has dementia and believes a nursing home would be the best care. E refuses to do the coordinated visits on the weekends (E does visit, but wants it to be a social call, not work). Also wants to hire someone to clean the parent’s house and do yardwork. Siblings A-D weekly clean the parent’s house, mow the grass, rake leaves, etc. Sibling A has power of attorney and control over the checkbook and won’t pay for these items (E refuses to clean because E believes the parent should hire someone). The elderly parent is 90 years old with over 5 million still, so could easily afford help or a nursing home. E would even be okay hiring more round the clock care, but doesn’t want to spend their own retirement cleaning their parent’s house.
Lots of fighting over care, help and sending the parent to a nursing home. Is there any solution? Both sides have points.
A 90 yo with dementia has more that $5 million in assets, and one of their adult children won't hire someone to clean the house, do yardwork, or provide more in-home care? That's ridiculous. Person A does not have a point, she's money grubbing to preserve his or her inheritance. I wouldn't spend my retirement cleaning my millionaire mother's house either.