Anonymous wrote:This is so frustrating. My sister did so much work (forms, phone calls, documents) so that my mom who had dementia would have an aide coming to the house every morning. They came this morning for the assessment, my mom acted very normal and refused the help. My mom clearly needs it, she can’t manage her own eating/self care/ etc. she is confused and forgets every little thing, has difficulty walking etc. There’s nothing we can do once my mother refuses. My sister will have a break down when she hears.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP do you imagine that all the other dementia patients in this magical country agreed to aides as soon as they needed them? Dementia is the same everywhere. So the people there have experience and will know the right next steps. It might be that you have to back off and let her struggle a bit. But there are also medical assessments for cognitive decline, like drawing the face of a clock and things like that which are harder to mask. I’m sure the agency can advise you on how to qualify your mother for services without her consent.
I don’t think mocking the country as “magical” is being helpful here. The agency specifically says (and I know this to be true) that you can’t force services on someone who doesn’t consent unless they’re declared incompetent. They can be forced into a home only if they’re a threat to self or others. I told you that before and your limited knowledge about Germany, France and the UK is equally unhelpful. I am dealing with an obstinate parent here and without her consent there is nothing they’re going to do for her. Once she deteriorates, which will eventually happen, they’ll reassess. It’s just sad because she needs help now and can afford it. Also - these are good people who work there who want to help.
Pp are trying to tell you that you u just have to wait for it get yet terrible - like being admitted to a hospital for starvation bc she hasn’t eaten in 3 days. That’s the problem with the patient centered model in these cases - no one can prevent the huge problem they see coming; they just wait for it to happen.
I know that, unfortunately that’s how it is. It’s just the previous poster who insists on knowing how everything works in Europe because she lived in 3 countries there. It’s infuriating when people who have no clue insist they have all the wisdom. Maybe an NPD thing, IDK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP do you imagine that all the other dementia patients in this magical country agreed to aides as soon as they needed them? Dementia is the same everywhere. So the people there have experience and will know the right next steps. It might be that you have to back off and let her struggle a bit. But there are also medical assessments for cognitive decline, like drawing the face of a clock and things like that which are harder to mask. I’m sure the agency can advise you on how to qualify your mother for services without her consent.
I don’t think mocking the country as “magical” is being helpful here. The agency specifically says (and I know this to be true) that you can’t force services on someone who doesn’t consent unless they’re declared incompetent. They can be forced into a home only if they’re a threat to self or others. I told you that before and your limited knowledge about Germany, France and the UK is equally unhelpful. I am dealing with an obstinate parent here and without her consent there is nothing they’re going to do for her. Once she deteriorates, which will eventually happen, they’ll reassess. It’s just sad because she needs help now and can afford it. Also - these are good people who work there who want to help.
Pp are trying to tell you that you u just have to wait for it get yet terrible - like being admitted to a hospital for starvation bc she hasn’t eaten in 3 days. That’s the problem with the patient centered model in these cases - no one can prevent the huge problem they see coming; they just wait for it to happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP do you imagine that all the other dementia patients in this magical country agreed to aides as soon as they needed them? Dementia is the same everywhere. So the people there have experience and will know the right next steps. It might be that you have to back off and let her struggle a bit. But there are also medical assessments for cognitive decline, like drawing the face of a clock and things like that which are harder to mask. I’m sure the agency can advise you on how to qualify your mother for services without her consent.
I don’t think mocking the country as “magical” is being helpful here. The agency specifically says (and I know this to be true) that you can’t force services on someone who doesn’t consent unless they’re declared incompetent. They can be forced into a home only if they’re a threat to self or others. I told you that before and your limited knowledge about Germany, France and the UK is equally unhelpful. I am dealing with an obstinate parent here and without her consent there is nothing they’re going to do for her. Once she deteriorates, which will eventually happen, they’ll reassess. It’s just sad because she needs help now and can afford it. Also - these are good people who work there who want to help.
Anonymous wrote:OP do you imagine that all the other dementia patients in this magical country agreed to aides as soon as they needed them? Dementia is the same everywhere. So the people there have experience and will know the right next steps. It might be that you have to back off and let her struggle a bit. But there are also medical assessments for cognitive decline, like drawing the face of a clock and things like that which are harder to mask. I’m sure the agency can advise you on how to qualify your mother for services without her consent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You just still have the aide show up, they are used to this. You don't give in.
They are legally prevented from providing the services unless my mother consents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this is so normal. It’s going to take a while to make the change. Don’t give up.
Also we don’t know the country but there is almost certainly an administrative process for declaring someone incompetent.
If that process says she can decline, you just have to accept it and wait until she falls or burns the house down.
Anonymous wrote:OP this is so normal. It’s going to take a while to make the change. Don’t give up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You just still have the aide show up, they are used to this. You don't give in.
They are legally prevented from providing the services unless my mother consents.
Hmm. They should have lots of tricks to elicit a grudging non-refusal of services. Otherwise, just get someone who is willing to come in. How do you think other families deal with this? Managing a dementia patient involves lots of lies, OP.
That’s not how it works there, unfortunately. Services are by the book and on the books. I can’t just hire a random person who isn’t even qualified, to show up. Also she’s have to pay for it, did I mention she has a generous pension? She’s in the top 5-10% of income there, just with the pension for herself. This isn’t a country without a safety net where kids have to fund the bills for their underinsured parents.
Which country? I’ve lived in Germany, France and the UK, and I’m having a hard time believing you.
Also, can you place her in an appropriate care home?