Just Joe - thank you for sharing this update with us. I am sorry your mom's situation has declined so rapidly. Have you had the opportunity to be involved with any of her doctor's appointments and, if so, have they provided any explanation? Is this "normal" or at least in the range of "normal", or have they checked to see if any other issues might be causing the rapid deterioration?
It definitely sounds like getting her in memory care ASAP is the right thing to do and, hopefully, there will be some improvement with your dad once that happens.
Yes, I have attended several of her appointments with my parents. I have better success managing her than my father. I just sweeten up my language like I'm speaking to a young child. She likes the car DW and I bought last spring perhaps just b/c of the color. It is quite ordinary otherwise. I always drive that so it seems familiar. She likes to sit up front. I play music that she likes.
My father's approach is to get frustrated if she decides she isn't going to the appointment and to tell her how important this trip to the doc is. Queue too many words, too much explanation for her current mental faculties, and his elderly male command voice which she really doesn't like to cooperate with.
I can lure her into attending the appointment. Will you go along with me? Would you go for a ride with me? How about we stop for coffee after the appointment? Etc. etc. etc. And she more often than not goes with me (us).
Dad is tired, frustrated and beyond his limits. The last trip required me stopping a lengthy "argument" between them. She's trying to explain herself. "I don't appreciate people prying in my business" which is a frequent expression of her frustration at her loss of her independence. Anytime she gets frustrated with someone out comes a similar statement: "I don't appreciate..." He responded with a long winded explanation of the importance of this appointment and how they (really I) made the appointment months ago, and she agreed to go, etc. There was nothing productive about the whole affair.
I finally just told both of them to say not another word. ;) I needed her to have time to "reset" i.e. forget the conversation so her mood would mellow before we arrived at the doctor's office, which she did. Then I double parked for a moment and helped her out of the car before I could park. Made things happen faster than she could understand so she couldn't develop a negative opinion about what was happening. It was kind of funny. Told Dad to get her on an elevator and up to the office and I would be along in a moment. Well, I outpaced him too apparently so I had to quickly park and herd both of them to the office. Once there she brought out the "I don't appreciate.."
Quick! Distract, delay, change the topic, etc. The Dr's office staff were SUPER. They knew just how to speak to her and she was very cooperative. They liked her sweater, her hair, and told her she was pretty. I sat in the exam room with my parents. She failed all their cognitive tests. Silently I passed them. ;)
Anyhow, MC facility deposit has been made, she's on a waiting list and we're told maybe a few weeks. There are other MC facility options but Dad wants to wait for the "preferred" one close to home. Sibling and I agree if he can manage with our help, hospice help and perhaps home health care in a pinch (haven't had them in yet) then we'll wait. Hospice was due at the house today.
We toured about 5 of them. Older facility was more like a hospital. Hard floors, dead-end hallways. Barely any outside space. No covered outside space (shade, protection from the weather). Newer facilities were more like a hotel. Carpet, endless hallways that looped in a square with a courtyard garden where they could not get lost. Covered porch areas. Much nicer and a little cheaper. The older facility really did not have the refinement that the newer places offered.
So I'll be at my parents' house tomorrow night and will stay up with her - her nights and days are mixed up. Sibling may come Sunday and stay until Monday. This gives my father a chance to get caught up on his sleep. My employer is giving me the flexibility to take days off if necessary. I'm using that option sparingly. Sibling also has some freedom in regard to their job.
I planted some seeds about Dad's life after Mom is in care. I want to get him (and her later) closer to us so we can spend more time with him, check on him conveniently, help him shop if necessary, etc. We have a large rural piece of ground with room for a cottage for Dad. To our surprise he seems enthusiastic about it. I don't want him across the state or across our county. Sibling is on board. His health is good now but what about 3-4 years from now? If he is across the yard, I can help him and he can participate in our family life (meals, events, visits, etc) more completely but also have the privacy that is important to him (vs living in our house or living in an apartment).