89yo parents. Mom has been on hospice care for a year. Dad is at his wit's end. Mom had a major personality change starting three weeks ago. Aggressive, violent, threatening. My first thought was UTI but it was dismissed.
Hospice was in the process of the paperwork at their home on Wednesday to put her in emergency respite care because dad needs a break, when mom picked up a can of pesticide and sprayed him in the face (this is an example of the behavior he has been dealing with for three weeks). This dq'd her from respite care so the hospice nurse sent her to the ER. They discharged her the next morning, said nothing was wrong with her.
Yesterday (Friday) was horrible. She left feces all over her room, while dad was cleaning that up, she went to other rooms and spread it all over walls, chairs, counters, you name it. She tried to push him down the steps, she hit him in the back enough to take his breath away. When the hospice nurse arrived, mom was outside half naked yelling and screaming (dad was inside cleaning up feces). They sent her back to the hospital, hospital called dad at 9:30 last night to come pick her up. He refused (doesn't drive in the dark and has trouble staying awake). He picked her up this morning, she is combative, refusing to take the meds for the UTI they now have diagnosed.
Nursing homes are closed, hospital won't keep, and she may very well kill dad if left in their house. Any suggestions? There is an appt Monday for a nursing agency to come in, but at $23.00 an hour, my dad isn't willing to pay for what is needed -- round-the-clock care.
If she's not having a reaction to a medication, which is doubtful, she can be having a psychotic break or something like that. A pscyh hospital is the best place for her right now, so a qualified doctor can try to figure out what's going on and get her back to thinking/behaving on an even keel.
A 'rest home' is the very best place for mom now, and it will give dad a well deserved and needed break from all the hysteria.
Wishing you the very best of luck moving forward, for you and your whole family. Sending you a hug & a prayer for peace.
Are they actually treating her?
My prayers are with all of you in this sad, scary situation.
Call her dr who handled her in the hospital and find out why they would release a violent person to return to the care of an elderly person. It may be she has those periods of appearing totally normal when in front of others - aka showboating. Ask the doctor to help you find a facility that can handle her. It's always easier to move from hospital to some kind of nursing facility. So, if nothing else, when she gets violent again, send her back to hospital and then call the social worker at the hospital and tell them what is going on - she is a danger to your father and cannot return home. There are facilities that are taking people during the covid thing. You just need some help to find one and that's how social worker can help you.
I am praying that your mom gets the help she needs to keep your dad safe.
Great big warm hug filled with strength for the days to come.
Yes, I would call the police, they will get her into a psych facility.
I Baker Acted my daughter when she was 19 (even though she was no longer a minor) b/c she was abusing drugs and completely out of control--suicide threats nonstop, etc.
Hardest thing I've ever done. And the best.
I needed her gone---and she needed to be somewhere she was watched and treated. When I made it about HER needs, not mine, the hospital reacted differently--I wasn't just a burned out mom, SHE was a sick adult child.
From 14 days in there to detox and have meds adjusted--(the calmest 2 weeks of my life!) she had to appear before a judge to determine her next step. She could have gone to a psych ward setting for 3+ months---and she knew it. She was allowed to come home with the caveat that she get therapy and stay on her meds.
With your mom, it is more likely they will treat her UTI and evaluate her condition. If she improves much, they may simply transfer her to another 'facility'--during the time she's in the psych ward, these decisions can be made.
She's passed over the line from 'kooky' to 'dangerous'. Your poor dad.
I don't know why they wouldn't continue Hospice, but that is not really the most pressing point.
She could kill your father--or seriously wound him. Best to head her off at the pass, so to speak and get her in a psych ward setting soon.
Is she this hostile towards anyone besides your dad? A CG coming in may just make her worse. I worked EC and I would have walked out the door if my clients were at the 'fecal art' stage.
Good Luck. Be there for dad. Even tho mom is off the rails, he still loves her, I'm sure and this is breaking his heart.
Using the term unsafe discharge creates a liability for the hospital if they force it without ensuring that her medical needs have been met. Keep telling everyone at the hospital that it is unsafe for her.
I would be flipping out that they are not treating her UTI. She could literally die from sepsis if this is not treated. She needs IV antibiotics and probably sedatives because they missed it for so long and it is so bad.
You need to be the advocate because dad is overwhelmed and sounds like he doesn't have the fight in him right now. Go get 'em and don't listen to any nonsense about why they can't treat her.
Your mother doesn't belong in a hospital - it's not in her best interests for her to be there. So (no doubt to the hospital's great relief) they can refuse on good clinical principles.
She can't be alone at home.
She needs skilled behavioural management as part of her care, such as you'd get in a psychiatric unit, but I doubt if you can find a psychiatric unit which would admit her when it seems the primary trigger is her u.t.i. Might be worth a shot, though, if she's refusing treatment for the u.t.i.? Who is helping on the medical side, can you ask them about a referral?
Your dad isn't willing to pay for the care - why? It's expensive, sure, but cost can be a real reason or it can be obstinate resentment. Or, does he have other reasons too, such as the common caregiver's version of Stockholm Syndrome whereby you stop believing that anyone else can give your loved one what she needs?
What's your mother's underlying disease, if you don't mind my asking? Why was she admitted to hospice?
Once in LTC, if needed, Mom can go back on Hospice.
Some difficult discussions need to be had with Dad. I wish you luck. Please keep us posted.
Dad should NOT go and pick her up.