Anonymous wrote:If she can care for him at home he will likely get better care. Duh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have elderly parents and they live near my brother. Siblings and I have always held the opinion that the boots on the ground gets to make decisions. Your sister is the one who is looking after your dad and she gets to make the decision. Sorry.
Do what you can to make her life easier. Emotionally, the quality of life for your dad will be better if he is at home. He is probably near death. Let him be surrounded by loved ones. Let him not be with strangers. The aim is not for him to live longer. The aim for him is to live happier even if it is a shorter life.
Thank you. This is very helpful. I will continue to do whatever I can to support her. I guess that includes taking all of her verbal abuse even when we all do anything we can to support her. She's doing the work, so I guess that's what I deserve. Unfortunately it's ripping apart the family, and after years and years of taking it from her and still continue to love her, one day that love might be gone. You can only abuse the ones that have been there for you so many times.
OP again - and just to add, his quality of life won't be better. She screams at him when he spills something, threatens to have him removed and put in a home if he won't get up and go to the bathroom himself, and then usually tells him to "F off". Everyone wants to make this about my poor sister, but as I have said, I could write a book about what life has been like for the rest of the family since she moved in. At the nursing home it's peaceful, he socializes in the dining room and has a routine. The same cannot be said when he gets home. But I guess I am just a deadbeat that had the nerve to not live by my parents, so good luck dad!
Anonymous wrote:...
My sister is hell bent on bringing him home because she promised him she would. He asks to come home but honestly I don't think he knows what that is anymore. My siblings feel it is a mistake bringing him home. I live 200 miles away, and while two other siblings are nearby and can help, it seems that skilled nursing is the better option. We would have to have someone be there overnight (he tries to get out of bed and has fallen multiple times) and the rest of the time it would be up to my sister's who are in their 60's. Yes, we could bring in extra help, but after adding up the expense of in-home care, plus the stress on the family (my sister that lives with him is very unstable and volatile), it makes more sense to put him in long term care, where he has 24/7 skilled care. Has anyone else had to deal with a situation like this? He is 86 and as you can see, has multiple health issues. How do you go about convincing someone to leave him where he is - which he seems to be happy with most of the time? I don't know if she is doing it to alleviate her own guilt (and trust me, the way she conducted herself with him before all of this happened, i know I would feel guilty), but the situation just doesn't seem safe for my father.
Anonymous wrote:And yes, my sister's decisions have notoriously been bad ones. When my mother was dying she insisted that she had 247 hospice care lined up at no cost and insisted that was correct even when we questioned her. My mother was brought home on a stretcher into her home and was there 2 hours before she finally realised that this was not the case. Since it's hard to find available beds my mother was placed in the nastiest nursing home In that area and died 2 days laterl. Alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You and your other sibs need power of attorney over him. Who is in control?
The sister that lives with him is POA over financial and health decisions. I would go into that topic, but the almighty judging queens on this board would pick it apart and go off on my about whatever it is I say. Gosh, it's nice to know so many people have wonderful families that all act completely normal in a time of crisis. Mine isn't one of them. I could write a book about what it was like with this same sister when my mother died. It was hideous, and stressful - and unnecessary. But this is how she rolls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And practice self-care. There are so many things you have no control over - all you can do is the best you can. I imagine your dad appointed your sister POA when he was well enough to do so; these were choices that he made. They may have been terrible or misguided choices, but they were his and it’s what precipitated the situation he’s in.
Thank you. My siblings had a call with the social worker and nursing staff yesterday. They were quite clear on the level of care required. And its a lot. I know they have experienced my sister's instability, but I'm not sure there is any more they can do, other than be candid about the enormity of the level of care he will need. The decision to appoint my sister as POA is another ugly event, but at the end of the day, even after experiencing her actions first hand, he did not make the change to one of his other children. And you are right, that decision affected both my mother at the end of her life, and now his. It's hard not to have that in the back of your mind and just say "oh well, live with your decision ", but he is still my father and is a feeble vulnerable old man. I still want the best for him, and I don't think this is it. I have to accept it and pray it doesn't go down the same ugly manner as my mother's death. As much as I want to prevent my father from the same fate, I fear I don't have a choice.
Anonymous wrote:And practice self-care. There are so many things you have no control over - all you can do is the best you can. I imagine your dad appointed your sister POA when he was well enough to do so; these were choices that he made. They may have been terrible or misguided choices, but they were his and it’s what precipitated the situation he’s in.