She has Alzheimer’s/dementia, is usually both cooperative and lucid but recently pleading, manipulating, insisting on getting back into her old bed/ getting up to go to the bathroom. Logic does not help (I know!) But what, outside of drugging her, helps? I’ve tried ‘distraction’, ‘Dr says…’, ‘Tomorrow…’, she’s wise to all of them. Even got her to the edge of the bed so she could see for herself that she can’t stand up. Nothing helps. Anyone have some techniques?
You may also want to rule out something organic going on that's caused a sudden change in her behavior, like a UTI or a stroke.
Good luck.
I wanted to tell you that my DH aunt, 96, with dementia and on hospice has been bed bound awhile now. Not quiet two years. She did get up and hurt herself when no one was in her room with her. She was able to make a few steps evidently but then fell. She bruised her right ankle the first time and the next time her left ankle.
She has told me that when she wants to get up she will.
Presently she refuses to get up to get into her wheelchair for a shower or anything else. Next week, who knows.
I just wanted to mention that sometimes they surprise us and are capable of more than we had thought.
I’m sorry your mom is upset. Maybe try some therapy or stretches in bed with her to pacify her that she is working on getting up. You might find some instructions on YouTube. Let us know if you find something that helps.
She also had a urinary catheter.
I think there is something called PureWick for home use. Maybe some of the posters on the forum are familiar with this product.
Best wishes to you and your mom as you go through this challenging time.
Epic, epic fail. It felt weird (the part that sits in the folds of your labia) is really big and dry. Then there's the 'suctioning' action which dries you out and a constant whooshing sound. No matter how uncomfortable I was, this thing was just NOT going to work. My doc came in and let me get up--thank goodness!
We are SO programmed to NOT wet the bed--that sometimes you simply cannot let go.
I think it's great in THEORY, but lacks any 'comfort' whatsoever. You'd have to be sedated, almost, to let it work.
It's also incredibly expensive. My 'trial' was billed at over $300 for ONE unit.
If she is bedbound & double incontinent - makes sense to stay in bed & change pads.
But if she knows when she has to use the toilet & has control - it's a reasonable thing to insist on, yes?
make it worse. But I want to develop some conversational tricks to divert her when she starts insisting. I don’t just want to shove a pill in her mouth and wait for it to take effect. Is that really the only way?
That's a very tough one and I'm sure you're at your wits end. It appears that she lives with you and that makes it all the more difficult.
She probably has some degree of IC - Interstitial Cystitis - which is a leaky inner bladder wall that allows all manner of compounds to get through the tissue and reach pain receptors that cause endless pain signals and are always firing which the brain reads as urgency, full stop gotta go now type urgency.
You don't want to drug her, can't reason with the broken brain and you have to prevent her falling. What they do in some MC units is to place the mattress on or very near the floor and then pad all around so that when she climbs over the rails or otherwise manages to get out of bed, she doesn't have far to fall and can't injure herself. It's drastic, but it's a good safety measure.
Of course, you've explored all the bed alarm options and wonder if you can live with constant alarms. There are so very few viable options.
If possible, have an OT come in under MC or Medicaid with a MD order and see what tools they have to offer.
Wishing you the best and some full nights of sleep.
Can't injure herself because she doesn't have very far to fall if there's a matress on the floor?
That it total bullcrap right there. I can't even tell you how many weak and feeble elders that fell out of bed onto the floor matress ended up with broken hips, ankles, and ribs.
Nursing homes do that nonsense, but you don't have to at home.
Believe me when I tell you, she can get seriously injured doing this matress or pad on the floor nonsense.
Ask her doctor for sleeping medication and anti-anxiety medication that she can be given as needed. If she sleeps in a hospital bed, put the rails up to the highest position they reach. This will prevent her not only falling out of bed and risking getting hurt, but will prevent her even being able to get out of the bed.
Let her complain, manipulate, plead, and insist all night until she tires herself out and goes to sleep if you don't want to give her medication. She's bedridden. What would be the harm on giving her sleeping medication at night? Or a nice, little benzo drug like ativan or xanax to chill her out a little bit. She'd feel good too. Ask her doctor.
My husband also had a supra pubic catheter, so that made my life a whole lot easier, so he only had to use the bedside commode when he had to poop, which thankfully he was 99% of the time a morning pooper.
I'm not a fan of medicating someone unless absolutely necessary, so I would perhaps try some kind of catheter for her first and a bedside commode(right next to her bed)where you can have someone lift her on and off of it as needed.
Best wishes.
Hospice has a device known as a 'bolster pillow' which attaches to mom's hospital bed; it cups her in place a bit which helps keep her in bed and not able to get out as easily. Speak to your hospice nurse about it; it helped my mother stay PUT in her bed once she lied down in it.
I was not adverse at ALL to medicating mom with Ativan and then morphine as needed when hospice came on board at the end of her life. My only goal was to keep my mother relaxed, calm, and not agitated as she was with her terrible Sundowning and insisting her dead mother and siblings were 'hiding' in the building somewhere but being kept from her. Should I have tried to 'talk her down' from that delusion instead of calming her down with Ativan? She was beside herself with grief and it had to stop. Ativan was the way to achieve that goal b/c with advanced dementia at 95, talking wasn't going to get anyone anywhere. She was wayyyyyyyyy beyond logic at that point in her journey.
My words are not intended to be 'mean' or 'harsh', just to wake you up to what's really going on here. Your mother needs help which comes in the form of medication at this point, at 100 years old and falling a lot, begging for HELP now. Please give it to her.
I wouldn’t hesitate to use Ativan or other drugs. My mom used it and it kept her calm while in hospice care.
Don’t you want your mom to be free from worry? The last thing that she needs at this stage in her life is anxiety!
They know what dosage to give her. My only concern was that my mom was comfortable and calm. That’s what I would want for myself if I were in this situation.
Please speak to her staff and ask them to explain everything to you.
Of course, if you feel like there is an adverse reaction to a particular drug, tell them. There are other drugs that can be substituted.
Don’t look at all drugs as ‘harmful.’ They are actually very helpful. We are so fortunate to have different medications available to us.
Our poor ancestors didn’t have the resources that are available today.
Please utilize whatever is necessary to make your mother comfortable and achieve a peaceful state of mind.
I use it myself on an 'only as needed' basis. These days with the new business I don't do any actual client caregiving. Also, I'm only around my mother for limited amounts of time because I have to be in the office. I find I need that medication less and less the more time I spend away from her and elderly people in general.
It's a miracle drug. I would not have been able to work in elderly homecare and maintain my level of care and patience hour after mind-numbingly boring hour with countless elderly people for 25 years without pharmaceutical intervention of some kind. Always by perscription by the doctor.
I encourage any caregivers who deal with elderly people whether it's family caregiving or hired to not be shy about asking their doctor for anti-anxiety medication. People in the caregiving field often suffer from anxiety disorders and depression especially those in it for a long time. Nothing like a nice little benzo to help the client and the caregiver mellow out. Ask your doctor.
I agree with Lealonnie, why not help her with medications?
She's very aware of these process happening. Like. REALLY aware of it. And it is super annoying/scary to her. She has to place a lot of trust into me to do the right things by her when she's caught up like that. and that's what it feels like, being caught up in a wave that's pushing you where it wants you to go. There's people and copies of people that flow in and flow out. The room becomes a new place and another new place and another new place. Doors are moving around. It's a lot going on for a woman who is stuck in a chair. ?
The thing that has given her peace is seroquel. Now, her one dr wanted us to just use the haldol in the kit. But SHE didn't want it. As in, my mom didn't want it. She is okay with seroquel though. The hospice nurse started her on a literal 1/4 dose because my mom has been so super sensitive to all of the meds in the kit. Which is me snapping up an already tiny pill on a pill cutter and she gets 12.5mg a day. Which so far has been enough to keep her in the real reality, unless she has a panic attack or gets super scared/agitated by something.
Which then I should give her one of two DROPS of ativan from the comfort kit which is like.. what. .1 or .2mg basically. And she is okay with that because "it is a very small dose and I am very sensitive to meds". And she is, and I believe her.
the script dose on the box is .25ml / .5mg per dose every whatever hours as needed for agitation. But you dont have to give that much unless someone is physically wrestling you. The "as needed" isn't just.. the whole .25ml until they're unconscious, though I guess you COULD do that.
The looping thoughts are really agitating to my mom. She's aware she's caught in the loop. She's juggling thoughts trying to keep any of them from hitting the floor but to do that it requires her to keep them all in the air, circling like juggling balls. She doesn't want to drop them because she wants to finish the thought-process, but she can't seem to catch the three balls into one hand to end the act.
You have the tools at your disposal to help her. You don't need to knock her out with meds. Just give her the smallest functional dose. Start with a drop or two or ativan and see how that helps. It might be enough to help your mom slow down the swirling in her brain enough to remember that she can't walk anymore.
But you're doing her no favors having her suffer like this. If you wouldn't withhold pain meds, please don't withold meds that can stop the agony going on in her head right now.
The next obvious step would be hoisting. Obvious to me anyway. More obvious than giving her a pill so that she stops wanting to get out of bed. Has she ever been hoisted before? How long has this been going on, by the way?
Meanwhile rather than telling her why she can't get out of bed ask her why she wants to and listen to the answers; if nothing else, the effort of answering might channel her energies away from lifting her legs over the rails, and it's not impossible that she'll tell you about something you can help her with.
If it's a profiling bed you should find raising the leg break makes it harder for her to lift her legs, too.
They make a device that sounds an alarm if patient tries to get up. Nursing homes and hospitals have them, but I don't know what it's called.
Her brain simply cannot remember than she no longer walks.
#1 You will definitely want to make sure on UTIs, bed sores, other infection. Apple cider vinegar will cure a UTI (1/4 or 1/3 cup hidden in something super sweet. Lower dose will help but not wipe it out). If bed sores, I can walk you through that. Any other pain that needs addressed?
#2 Routine bedtime and no late night talking, sweets, caffeine. Final TV should be something soothing. Maybe soothing music to fall asleep by. That helped my Mom.
#3 natural substances like lavendar in the form of a neck warmer, lavendar stuffed animal, pillow, or lavendar in a diffuser. Chamomile tea at bed time. There are also chamomile tablets for babies, that helped my Mom.
#5 Anything else that makes her comfortable
#6 May be weird for some people (I resisted this at first, but cannabis edibles). You need a reliable brand lke Bon Bombs. No THC. Cbd only. Dark chocolate will help sleep too. So get the dark chocolate cbd only ones. We gave my Mom just a half. At bed time and if she woke up aggravated. She rarely resisted chocolate. She was on to it at times so you have to be nonchalant "IF you'd like some chocolate." Or "I wanted one but not a whole one, if you want the other half."
Hope that helps! A lot of good tips in the other posts about safety, etc. Bless you and best of luck!
I also use a body pillow as a buffer although all depend on her mobility.
Sounds like she needs to be in a facility with 24/7 care / observation.
Nursing homes (and I presume all facilities) cannot restrain a person.
Very specific rules and regulations about this. 1/4 railings are used in nursing homes. Along with floor mats in case of falls.
* My friend (I believe) tried to get out of bed twice forgetting that he cannot stand up on his own and fell on the floor. Sometimes the only way to proceed is to break the fall with cushioning on the floor, as has been suggested. They do this in some nursing homes although the 'mat' is very thin. A person can hit their head on a table on their way to the floor so ... consider all possibilities.
Gena / Touch Matters
BAD, BAD, BAD idea! Nursing homes do this absurd and dangerous nonsense of putting a matress on the floor in case the person falls out of bed because they aren't allowed to use restraints and bed rails are considered restraints. Elderly and feeble people get seriously injured because of this stupidity, my father included.
At home, put the rails all the way up on the bed. They even sell padded rail covers so some demented elder can't get a hand or foot stuck. Also, there's nothing wrong with medicating a demented elder in bed. A nice little benzo like ativan or xanax and the person calms down straight away.
I am glad that your mom is resting peacefully now.
What specifically has her hospice care team told you?
Please do not be concerned about her appetite. She isn’t hungry. My mother told us that she wasn’t hungry or thirsty. The aides would moisten her mouth for her but she didn’t want to drink anything.
My friend tried to feed her sister food and water at the end of her life and her sister threw up. The hospice nurse explained to my friend that she wasn’t hungry and that food and water would only make her uncomfortable. People aren’t hungry towards the end of their lives.
My mother took Ativan and Seroquel in hospice. They kept her calm and comfortable. She became unconscious near the end and didn’t wake up. We were grateful that she died peacefully.
Wishing you peace as you continue on by your mom’s side.
So what do you complain about, cleaning up after them or them trying to go on their own?
Is someone there with you? If not, if you can reach out and find others to be with you and your mother 24/7 during these last few days.
Sending hugs to you as you go through this difficult time. I am glad that your mom is comfortable receiving hospice care.
My mom was on the exact drugs as your mom, Ativan, Seroquel and morphine at the end. She died peacefully.
You have been a wonderful advocate for your mom. I’m sure that she appreciates it.
Wishing you peace as you continue to care for your mom.