Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My takeaway is, don't micromanage the people taking care of your loved one.
My takeaway is that their approach is not working with your loved one; in fact it's having a negative effect. The caretakers will catch on if you tell them that.
I'm sure that approach worked well for someone else, but they need to know that it doesn't work all the time with everyone.
Anonymous wrote:My takeaway is, don't micromanage the people taking care of your loved one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom told my demented father that his mother was dead when he was anxious and looking for her. She died over 50 years ago. She had to watch him re-experience his mother’s death all over again. This isn’t any better. Sometimes there is no good option.
They haven’t tried other options. Staff is giving a very specific therapeutic lie and it isn’t working. As others have suggested, something that is more vague should be tried. It’s a red flag that staff didn’t figure this out immediately and try it.
+1
I am going to look at a new place next week.
OP
Anonymous wrote:There was a good article in The Atlantic about this: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2023/03/dementia-caregiver-imposter-delusion-paranoia/673308/?utm_source=chatgpt.com
I wonder if maybe you are misunderstanding what occurred at the nursing home. My mother has dementia and her brother died when i was in high school but for some reason she has forgotten this and constantly asks when he is coming to visit. Rather than telling her ten times a day that her brother is dead, which would be sad since she cries every time and it's as though she is just finding that out, you kind of say "I think maybe he's delayed. He's on his way." Eventually she forgets that she was expecting him and goes back to what she was doing. The article explains it better than i can, about how sometimes you work within their delusions, rather than always trying to get them to see reality, which they aren't going to remember anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom told my demented father that his mother was dead when he was anxious and looking for her. She died over 50 years ago. She had to watch him re-experience his mother’s death all over again. This isn’t any better. Sometimes there is no good option.
They haven’t tried other options. Staff is giving a very specific therapeutic lie and it isn’t working. As others have suggested, something that is more vague should be tried. It’s a red flag that staff didn’t figure this out immediately and try it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom told my demented father that his mother was dead when he was anxious and looking for her. She died over 50 years ago. She had to watch him re-experience his mother’s death all over again. This isn’t any better. Sometimes there is no good option.
They haven’t tried other options. Staff is giving a very specific therapeutic lie and it isn’t working. As others have suggested, something that is more vague should be tried. It’s a red flag that staff didn’t figure this out immediately and try it.
Yes, I do not agree that I am "micromanaging" as others have said.
Because of the upset nature of the patient, the nurses were testing the living parent for a UTI and want to change medications and add a visit to a psychiatrist. However, the staff themselves is at least partly causing this problem by telling my parent that their dead spouse will show up.
Yes, I know that dementia is the main problem. I get it. But why add more confusion to a confused person's day?
I suggested they ask the staff to say one of the adult kids will show up because we are ALIVE and DO show up. But a dead person can't show up at all. Ever.
Before this the living parent never asked about the dead parent...But with the staff reminding them they "have" a spouse, the living parent was getting all upset. What is the point beyond getting the patient upset?
Presumably because it worked for other patients they know. Duh. It's not that deep, OP. They don't care that much, and they do not overthink these things.
You seem very comfortable displaying contempt for underpaid employees doing a hard job as best they can, which includes trying something that surely works on a lot of other residents.
Anonymous wrote:I worked in elder care for years and my spouse has for decades. I have never heard of this happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom told my demented father that his mother was dead when he was anxious and looking for her. She died over 50 years ago. She had to watch him re-experience his mother’s death all over again. This isn’t any better. Sometimes there is no good option.
They haven’t tried other options. Staff is giving a very specific therapeutic lie and it isn’t working. As others have suggested, something that is more vague should be tried. It’s a red flag that staff didn’t figure this out immediately and try it.
Yes, I do not agree that I am "micromanaging" as others have said.
Because of the upset nature of the patient, the nurses were testing the living parent for a UTI and want to change medications and add a visit to a psychiatrist. However, the staff themselves is at least partly causing this problem by telling my parent that their dead spouse will show up.
Yes, I know that dementia is the main problem. I get it. But why add more confusion to a confused person's day?
I suggested they ask the staff to say one of the adult kids will show up because we are ALIVE and DO show up. But a dead person can't show up at all. Ever.
Before this the living parent never asked about the dead parent...But with the staff reminding them they "have" a spouse, the living parent was getting all upset. What is the point beyond getting the patient upset?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom told my demented father that his mother was dead when he was anxious and looking for her. She died over 50 years ago. She had to watch him re-experience his mother’s death all over again. This isn’t any better. Sometimes there is no good option.
They haven’t tried other options. Staff is giving a very specific therapeutic lie and it isn’t working. As others have suggested, something that is more vague should be tried. It’s a red flag that staff didn’t figure this out immediately and try it.
Yes, I do not agree that I am "micromanaging" as others have said.
Because of the upset nature of the patient, the nurses were testing the living parent for a UTI and want to change medications and add a visit to a psychiatrist. However, the staff themselves is at least partly causing this problem by telling my parent that their dead spouse will show up.
Yes, I know that dementia is the main problem. I get it. But why add more confusion to a confused person's day?
I suggested they ask the staff to say one of the adult kids will show up because we are ALIVE and DO show up. But a dead person can't show up at all. Ever.
Before this the living parent never asked about the dead parent...But with the staff reminding them they "have" a spouse, the living parent was getting all upset. What is the point beyond getting the patient upset?
Presumably because it worked for other patients they know. Duh. It's not that deep, OP. They don't care that much, and they do not overthink these things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom told my demented father that his mother was dead when he was anxious and looking for her. She died over 50 years ago. She had to watch him re-experience his mother’s death all over again. This isn’t any better. Sometimes there is no good option.
They haven’t tried other options. Staff is giving a very specific therapeutic lie and it isn’t working. As others have suggested, something that is more vague should be tried. It’s a red flag that staff didn’t figure this out immediately and try it.
Yes, I do not agree that I am "micromanaging" as others have said.
Because of the upset nature of the patient, the nurses were testing the living parent for a UTI and want to change medications and add a visit to a psychiatrist. However, the staff themselves is at least partly causing this problem by telling my parent that their dead spouse will show up.
Yes, I know that dementia is the main problem. I get it. But why add more confusion to a confused person's day?
I suggested they ask the staff to say one of the adult kids will show up because we are ALIVE and DO show up. But a dead person can't show up at all. Ever.
Before this the living parent never asked about the dead parent...But with the staff reminding them they "have" a spouse, the living parent was getting all upset. What is the point beyond getting the patient upset?