Mom can still drive and it's terrifying to be with her in a car. She can't follow verbal or written instructions.
If I can ever get an appointment (hard too do when I'm 2,000 miles away) for a geriatric psychiatry type, I feel they can help. Have to be cagey about getting her into shower let alone drive her to mystery appointment. Will be with her for month this time Anyone know someone to work with in Citrus County, FL?
That probably will be a trip to the ER.
Does your sister have POA? Or do you? Anyone?
If no one this should be taken care of BEFORE she is formally diagnosed. (If a lawyer thinks she is competent to appoint someone. If not you may have to go the route of you or sister obtaining Guardianship)
Your sister should NOT be spending her money on mom's personal expenses.
She should budget a set amount and when that money runs out that month then no more purchases.
Mom should not be driving. Sister should have the car disabled. And if mom is living alone, she should not be. A call to local Senior Services might provide some guidance. Your sister should tell them that she can no longer safely care for mom. (safety is not just mom's safety but your sister's safety, if she is experiencing seizures she should not be the sole caregiver)
When/If you go help your sister she should leave and let you help mom so there is no 3 party dynamics that your mom can pick fights with pitting you all against each other.
Back when HMOs were a thing, my friend had a heel spir that her PCP felt therapy would help and would not give her a referrel to a foot specialist. She called the HMO and told them that surgery to remove it was her best option, they agreed and referred her to the specialist.
If Primary means the person who is caring for her, if no medical POA in effect, they can do nothing. I would call DMV and see if she could be tested. They will take her license on the spot.
Simply refuse to ride with your mom behind the wheel, and when she gets mad, tell her why.
I recognized Mom was beginning to slip and began keeping notes of the things I was seeing that were different in her. Eventually, she didn’t take her meds and ended up in the ER. I was able to insist on a bedside psych eval after attending neuro read my notes.
Yet you & sister have big concerns. Don't think she IS actually independant.
You would like investigation of her capabilities, dementia screening & diagnosis & treatment (if appropriate).
Would that be a fair recap?
What expectations do you have on a diagnosis changing the situation? Do you think it will change Mom's mindset or behaviour? Or enable an existing POA to be activated?
I think your sister has to re-evaluate. Get herself off this bus before it crashes. Then she can join you at the sidelines.. to alert others your Mom needs help.
What is the goal here? Is it just to have her stop driving ? Or are you looking for a diagnosis in order to get her into assisted living ?
My mother’s PCP was no help either , all he did was suggest assisted living after I gave a note I had written to the nurse to give to the doctor . ( Later the nurse told me the doctor asked her opinion about my mother before seeing Mom that day , and the nurse told the doctor that she “ was seeing cracks for years”) . My mother said absolutely not leaving her home .
Doc didn’t offer any testing or referral to any other doctor, just told her she should think about assisted living to give me a break . That didn’t help because my mother felt it was my duty to take care of her . He did have the nurse give me a brochure about getting home care, which mom refused strangers in the house .
But Mom could not be home alone at night anymore. She was sundowning , calling up saying my (teenage) sister stayed out all night with her boyfriend . My sister did not live with Mom , nor was she a teenager . She was a married mom in her 40’s .
My other sister called our local County Dept of Aging , they sent out a social worker who interviewed Mom and said she wasn’t safe alone and needed 24/7 supervision ( not to mention bathing ). The social worker was scheduled to come back with someone else to remove my mother from her home and physically bring her to an assisted living facility that we picked out . ( mom would not look at any ) . One of my other sisters told my aunt who called up and tipped off my mother. My mother then said she was having chest pain , I think to avoid being taken from her home . We called ambulance to take her to the hospital.
At the hospital she finally had an evaluation ( at my asking when I explained the situation ) got the social worker at the hospital involved. Mom was diagnosed with dementia deemed it was not safe to live alone and she went to assisted living from the hospital .
Fortunately POA papers were done years previously when my father was alive .
If you don’t have POA that can be problematic , if Mom is not willing to sign , or if she’s not competent or willing enough. If no POA assigned by your mother she will be a ward of the county or you could seek guardianship through an elder care lawyer ( which is expensive) .
If you are looking to get Mom out of the house try to get her to sign POA first for medical and financials . Then call dept of aging to help if your mother is unwilling to go look at assisted living places . Have one or two picked out ahead of time .
If Mom ends up in the ER asked them to have her tested for dementia , say you don’t think she can live alone anymore . Say it’s an unsafe discharged and don’t take her home . Get the social worker involved to help facilitate placement at a faculty . Tour and have a few in mind . My suggestion is placement since your mother sounds very uncooperative .
Disconnect the car battery so she can’t drive . If your sister or anyone else lives or stays with your Mom , don’t leave car keys where your mother can find them .
You and sister need a united front ( covertly ) to get Mom placed in assisted living possibly memory care . Without money will need to start Medicaid process and find a facility that takes Medicaid . Does she own her home , sell that and use the money from sale to pay the facility . A elder care lawyer can help with this process or sometimes a social worker . Good luck .
It's not a bad thing to be truthful about what happens when someone can't drive anymore, truth is they are going to be angry or disappointed but they will feel so much worse if they injure or kill someone or themselves.
It might sound like a guilt trip but it's the truth and something that needs to be addressed now.
I've had to drive my mother to the Dr plenty of times and they will talk to you privately and help you with any issues you have.
Wishing you the best!
First and foremost--take the keys away. Mom shouldn't be driving. I had to do the same thing and Mom is on a blood thinner. You cannot be polite about this. You have to think of Mom's and other's safety on the road. They can't see what is happening.
Lots of water and a shot of cranberry juice. A UTI can also mimic Dementia or sometimes they have both at the same time. The railings around the toilet are better than the booster seat. Along with white "cotton briefs". No step-in/no back shoes or area throw rugs.
I had a Nurse Practitioner come to our place and assess my mother. Should you find another PCP with a better rapport? A lot of PCP are not taking new patients, let alone once you hit 80. If you can find a NP and a MD who can oversee, that can be done too. A family medicine practice will suffice and they go on the portal and keep the PCP abreast of mother's specialists.
The portal is the way to go. You can do everything online especially if you are out-of-state.
The first signs of my mother's decline was her peripheral vision. I couldn't understand why my mother would walk behind a car backing of out supermarket parking space. After all, she had new hearings aids and cataract surgery. Well, with Lewy Body Dementia your peripheral goes first so it's like putting snorkeling goggles on a person and they only see a small circumference in front.
The executive functioning skills and any type of instructions my mother could not follow just as you mentioned. Now I am not a medical professional but I am just telling you our situation.
You could get a Neurologist and/or Geriatrician Neuro-Psychologist. My mother has both. The PCP is/was wonderful. Everyone's situation is different.
This is important--check out on your State Board's Medical website ALL of your mother's doctors. I had a bad feeling about one and my "little voice inside" was right on target.
I have my mother check in with a Geriatric Neuro-Psych every 6 months. I accompany her. It's not in my mother's best interest to have an MRI every 6 months since my mother has a bad heart. We know she has Lewy Body Dementia. I don't want her tortured. I switched her from Warfarin/Coumadin to Eliquis. The blood draws and INR were all over all the place and her arms were black and blue. There are no blood draws with Eliquis but it is more expensive.
Dementia patients are afraid of the water but they still have to be groomed. I have a shower chair, nozzle, handicapped bars and a beauty box and spa bathrobe for my mother. Every so often I take Mom across the way and also have my mother's hair washed and styled. A cut every 6 weeks, Podiatrist every 9 weeks, dentist cleaning/check up every 6 months.
Maybe you could get her in the shower and the next day bring her to the hairdressers. Make gradual changes. Once you get a PCP some will can work with some doctors will let you have an online appointment. It depends. They have to see you first and then examine you but as time goes on and these are progressive diseases as one ages, this can be done. In the mean time if you can control some of the symptoms, if it's possible, you need a diagnosis first.
The test at the Neuro-Psy doc will be, they ask the patient, what is 7 from 100...what is 7 from 93...what is 7 from 86, etc. Then the 3 word test--remember these 3 words.
I hope I was of some help...
Then he demanded to be taken down to buy another car. His girlfriend managed to let the three different dealers know what was going on and they all just said, “you can’t buy a car today because you don’t have any credit”, or you are unable to buy a car anymore because you don’t have a driver’s license.
This is going to be an ongoing struggle with him I know, but if he manages to get his hands on another car, it will be time to get the actual police involved.
If you do not, no MD will examine an unwilling patient nor discuss outcome of exam with you, nor will you--should there be a dx of dementia--get any POA in future, as mom will be unable to confer it upon you.
You say you are 2,000 miles from her. Who does she live with and who at present is involved in evaluating her safety?
I would make a visit now and evaluate the situation. You may need to report your Mom to DMV and let her call you in for testing. The sad fact is that many elders stop driving the way my brother did, with a serious accident and injury, and your getting a call in the middle of the night as I did from a hospital telling you that your Mom is badly injured. It WAS incidentally, the way he was diagnosed with probably early Lewy's dementia.
https://elderaffairs.org/programs-services/elder-protection-programs/
Have you talked to her about her driving? Not so much on the level of mental, but on the level of her reflexes are not as good as they used to be...how bad she would feel if she hurt someone else in a wreck?
Ad geriatric dr can probably handle the testing for her, but I'd be really careful about telling her she has dementia if that's what the test indicates. It will make her sad or angry to know she's losing her memory.
If your original PCP does not help you out - ask for a second opinion.
Also have mom tested for a UTI.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK513310/
"Clinical neuropsychologists are doctoral level health care providers who have specialized training in brain-behavior relationships and perform comprehensive evaluations in addition to providing certain forms of treatment."
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diagnostics/4893-neuropsychological-testing-and-assessment#