Tag: concerned

welcome to girlfriends with aging parents

after death … in need of a friend!

My very dear girlfriend lost her father five days ago. She is flying home alone today & I offered to pick her up at the airport (yes, at rush hour). I have had time to think about how I could help her. Typically, people will call the person who has lost a loved one & ask, “what can I do for you”? Unfortunately, the adult who has suffered the loss is in their grief. HOW WOULD THEY KNOW what to tell you? I decided to take a different tactic, after a lengthy conversation with a few of my other girlfriends, by the way! Yesterday, I roasted a whole chicken & root vegetables (in disposable pans). Today I made a simple green salad & home made salad dressing. Another friend dropped off home made molasses & chocolate chip cookies. THIS SAYS, WE CARE! No one should have to return from burying a parent and take a taxi home! I was able to get a small group of our mutual friends to prepare to more nights dinners. This says, WE LOVE YOU, We are here for you. It may not be food that your friend needs. It may be YOU! Just your presence. You might simply say something like, “can I just come over & be with you”? Anyone else have an idea about how to help a grieving friend? written by Toby

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how to have “the talk” – my mother’s worries

My grandmother suddenly lost her partner last April and didn’t want to live alone in their traditional apartment. My parents offered to take her in to their home and have admitted to my sister and me that they didn’t put a lot of thought into it before asking her. They did tell her however, that while they are away four months of the year wintering in Texas, that she would have to go stay with her other daughter in town, my aunt. My aunt can be difficult and that only lasted for one month before my grandmother insisted on coming back to my parents house. She said she is not going back there next year. This year it worked out okay because my sister and her husband are temporarily staying at my parents house for the next two months while they are away and can look after my grandmother. Next year will be a problem. My mother worries about her and doesn’t want her staying in the house alone. My grandmother says she will be fine!

One of the greatest joys for my parents is going to Texas for the winter. My grandmother used to join them occasionally but says now that she doesn’t want to be that far from her doctor. My mom would really like for my grandmother to look into the retirement home a mile and a half from their home but doesn’t know how to bring it up. She is in reasonably good health and my mom feels that having activities to do will keep her younger. My grandmother doesn’t want any part of it. Meanwhile, my parents have rearranged many aspects of their live for her. My dad pretty much lives in his bedroom but wouldn’t dream of hurting my grandmothers feelings by asking her to leave. I am from the polite family, so there is a lot of silent suffering going on! My mom wants to start a conversation with my grandmother about checking out the retirement place but doesn’t know how to go about it. I am looking for advice from people who have been in this situation to know what to and not to say. I should mention that while I love my grandmother very much, she has been spoiled all her life and everyone always caters to her. How can I help my mom find the courage and words to make this a win win for everyone.

Thank you in advance for any words of wisdom. Submitted by Mechelle

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helping Mom to engage – ideas???

I recently relocated my 88 yr old mother from a rehab skilled nursing facility in South Seattle closer to my residence on the North end. She is now in a very nice adult family home and doing quite well. She is a very sweet and kind lady and rarely complains and gets lots of attention from her caregivers. She shows no signs of depression but is not interested in much of anything including TV even though she always enjoyed the holiday movies. Due to mobility issues, she is in a wheelchair. I have taken in books and magazines, videos, a headset with pre-programmed music stations, and numerous family photos including making two large collages for her wall. She shows appreciation for everything I bring in but is interested for only a short period of time, like a child with a new toy. I do her hair and nails and keep her in nice attire as she takes pride in her appearance. The home has provided games and had musicians visit as she has always loved music. I am at a total loss as to find something/anything that will keep her interest? I decorate her room for all the holidays and take her out for dinner and also to the mall to see the holiday decorations whenever I can. The home has asked me for any suggestions as they too are at a loss as how to engage her into something that she will enjoy or continue to show interest in. In her young days, she enjoyed music and reading but shows little interest in either of them now. She likes to sit by the window and watch for me to come and that is her highlight for the day. Any suggestions would be much appreciated. Thank you!! Written by Anna

 

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community for those caring for an aging parent

Norma & I had the pleasure of being interviewed by KING 5 TV host, Margaret Larsen.

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nurse at elder care facility ally in decision making!

If your loved one lives in a facility, you may have experienced this recurring scene: You walk into the building for your normal visit, expecting nothing new, but voilà—a staff member pulls you aside to deliver some bad news. Other staff members then share different opinions about the same problem. Who do you listen to? How do you figure out the best thing to do for your loved one?

This past weekend, for example, I drove downtown to visit my mother, Judy, in her nursing home. She has advanced dementia, and I’ve been her caregiver for 7 years—first in my home and then in a variety of dementia care facilities. When I walked into the dining room Sunday evening to sit with Mom and spoon-feed her, the nurse on duty said, “Hi. I need to talk to you. Yesterday your mother had three seizures, one after another.”

“She did?” Mom has had mild seizures for several months—not violent seizures but the kind where she spaces out and becomes non-responsive. She was on medication at one point to reduce the seizures but it made her lethargic & weakened her ability to swallow, so we took her off it. As far as I knew, her seizures were infrequent.

“Yes,” he said. “And usually if that happens we’d send the person to the E.R. But we didn’t know what you would want.”

Mom’s on “comfort care,” meaning that she shouldn’t be taken to the hospital for any invasive tests or procedures, and if her health declines suddenly we would call hospice. But what should we do in this case? I told him, “I need someone to explain to me what would happen if she got a fourth seizure but didn’t go to the hospital.”

“Well, the seizure might move down from her face, where they are now, into her chest, paralyzing her diaphragm and making it difficult for her to breathe. At the E.R. they could give her medication to stop the seizures. We don’t have that kind of medication here.” He looked at me gently. “If it were up to me, I’d send her to the E.R.”

With that information, I agreed with him about sending Mom to the E.R. Early the next morning, though, I called the head nurse on Mom’s floor. When I discovered that she was out for the day, I dropped by and talked to the temporary head nurse. She told me that instead of calling an ambulance after a second or third seizure they could try giving Mom Valium. We agreed to try that, and I left feeling relieved that Mom might be able to avoid the E.R.

Tuesday morning the head nurse was back at work and called me. She told me that Mom is actually in very little danger of having a full-body seizure that would affect her breathing. She thought Valium unnecessary. But she said she would definitely call an ambulance if Mom’s seizures got worse. Feeling reassured, I agreed with her plan to wait and observe.

Thank goodness I knew from experience that the head nurse was the key person to talk to. Staff members like her will go out of their way to communicate with you as an essential part of your loved one’s care team. They’re often hidden in a windowless office somewhere, but these angels do exist, and they’re a treasure.

submitted by Martha Stettinius: author of the new book “Inside the Dementia Epidemic: A Daughter’s Memoir,”  She serves as a volunteer representative for New York State for the National Family Caregivers Association. For more information about the book, please visit www.insidedementia.com. Martha can be contacted at Martha@insidedementia.com.

 

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girlfriends share

I am lucky enough to have a girlfriend living in the same city that I do, that I have known all of my life. We know each other’s families well because of all the time we spent at one another’s homes, growing up. My mother & her father actually went out on a date together when they were in college.

So you ask, “why is this all so important & relevant”? The answer: due to our ongoing relationship we spend hours discussing what is currently going on with our families & in particular with our aging parents. The topics cover information that is often too personal to discuss with outsiders. It’s just not a conversation I would be having with too many other people.

A perfect example is our ongoing e-mail exchange about my mother’s daily barrage of telephone calls. They are filled with panic and amount to nothing. By that I mean, my mom calls about every ache & pain she has and whether she is too hot or too cold or if the food somehow does not suit her. On the other hand, my girlfriend’s mother has no telephone to call out on, as they took it away from her! She broke her hip a year and a half ago trying to use the phone. Today, since she has dementia, she would not even know how to use one any more.

I love my husband and my siblings but I do not know what I would do without my best girlfriend, Samantha. Who is that special someone that you can talk to? written by Jill in Alabama

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how do you find a competent, caring doctor for your elderly parents?

We are about to change my elderly parents primary physician. A geriatric internist, he is friendly but his follow-up is terrible. Medications that he has prescribed and need his approval for refill languish for weeks, somewhere in limbo, and require multiple calls to get filled. Each of my parents take nearly 20 pills apiece and feels that they are overmedicated. When they have asked him about this, he seems unfamiliar with what he has prescribed for them and states that he will taper them down and then does nothing. They feel that this doctor prescribes pills to mask aches and pains but does little to find the source. However, who is willing to take on new patients in their mid-80’s with numerous ailments, albeit age appropriate?

It is not news that our healthcare system is failing. HMO’s are on the lookout for healthy, profitable patients, according to doctors David Himmelstein and Steffie Woodhandler in “For Patients, Not for Profits”:

Not surprisingly, research shows high satisfaction and good outcomes for healthy HMO members. But even the best HMOs under treat the sick. HMO stroke patients get less rehabilitation and more often end up in nursing homes. Medicare HMO patients are denied needed home care. Depressed patients in HMOs are less likely to be diagnosed, get less treatment, and are more frequently disabled by their illness. Poor, sick patients have a 21% higher risk of dying in HMOs than in fee-for-service care.

How does one go about finding the increasingly rare, caring, responsible doctor willing to treat failing, elderly patients? Your feedback on your experiences would be really appreciated.

 

 

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treatment for osteoporosis a puzzle

PANIC!  I am a middle aged woman diagnosed with severe osteoporosis. My mother, who is in her mid-80’s, suffers from a very advanced form of the disease, where merely reaching for a dish or rolling over in bed can cause a fracture. I took Fosamax for seven years in tandem with calcium supplements, per my physician’s instructions, until medical findings revealed the drug could actually cause much more harm than good. At that point, my doctor and I agreed that I would try a year of just calcium pills and see if my baseline bone scan changed at all.

On May 23rd, a study was released in the journal HEART, stating that supplementary calcium may be bad for your heart and raise the risk of heart attacks. It showed an 86 percent increase in heart attacks among those who regularly took the supplements compared to those who didn’t take any.

New recommendations just set forth by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force state supplements of Vitamin D alone, or with calcium, may not help prevent osteoporosis caused by bone fractures.

“There isn’t evidence to suggest that 400 IU of vitamin D plus 1,000 milligrams calcium can prevent fractures among postmenopausal women who do not live in assisted living or nursing home facilities,” says Task Force member Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, MD. She is an associate professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco.

At this point I am not sure where to turn. None of these studies seem to address alternatives. Am I doing more harm to my body than good?

 

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it is about the money … sometimes!

A recent Wall Street Journal piece (June 11, 2012) chronicled the reality that baby boomers may be facing less than optimal expected inheritance from their parents. Why? It seems, as we all know, our parents are living longer and using up much of that nest egg for their own care. Add to that the reality of the post 2008 economic downturn, which has impacted all of us, and you have a recipe for concern. To add to the “concern”, we also have the reality that many of the “boomer generation” is also heavily engaged in dealing with our own children, many of whom are finding it difficult to find work.

I know some of this first hand. In the 1980′s, I remember sitting with a financial advisor and creating an annuity for my mother which would guarantee her a steady income for years. Funny thing, my mother lived well into her 90′s and outlived her money. I know that many of you share this journey and know the stresses that this can cause. Yes, just at the time when we should be feeling secure in our own financial world, we are more anxious as to how to continue care for a parent, be “there” for our kids and grandchildren while trying to save for and plan for our own transition from full time work.

I have found that taking the time to sit with a financial expert can make a difference. I do not profess to have any expertise in how to manage money. The complexities of the current financial world are so profound that it is a blessing to be able to have someone who can make sense out of all of the possibilities. I have even suggested this to my daughter and son- in- law. In the middle of this financial and familial transition, it is often necessary and prudent to seek the advice of a trusted expert. There is security in having a plan that is tailored to you and your needs. Our lives are so stressed and pressured that any way that we can find to lessen those pressures is a blessing.

Shalom,

Rabbi Richard F. Address, D.Min

www.jewishsacedaging.com

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dealing with a death wish

I just want to cry! My parents, who are in their 80’s and live in a retirement home, have just given up on life. They are convinced that the two of them are going to die imminently. Mom is constantly in pain from reoccurring osteoporosis fractures and Dad has a faltering memory, relies heavily on a cane to walk, and arthritis makes it difficult for him to insert his hearing aids. Their fatalistic attitude has made them reclusive. Dad and Mom only leave their apartment to go down to the community dining room for dinner.

As their daughter and only child, it destroys me emotionally to see them like this. In my mind I reason that this is severe depression but in my heart, I am in a panic. When I visit them twice a week, their death is always part of the conversation and nothing I say seems to have any effect on how they feel. Dad and Mom have said that they are not planning to end their own lives, but feel they only have months left as they “are on a downhill decline that will only end one way.” Every new ache or pain is seen as a “sign” of impending doom.

What can I do? They won’t talk to a social worker, avoid family get-togethers and go into a complete panic if apart for even a few minutes. I can’t bear to watch them just sit there and wait to die. These were two active, intelligent people who traveled the world in retirement, read and kept up on world affairs. Now they sit in their living room all day doing little except for watching Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune. I desperately want to “save” the people I love, but does one just accept their parent’s mindset or fight to keep them alive? What do you think, what can I do? written by Jane in Texas

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