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Apologies for the long read but this is a bit complex.


Everyone describes my 92-year-old mother as a wonder. She shops online, does Tai Chi, downloads e-books and can discuss current politics. She lives in an independent villa in a retirement village. However she is also reclusive and prone to anxiety.


About 5 weeks ago she fell and broke her pelvis. In the medical ward, she became agitated when the medical staff asked if they could locate her advanced care directive (she has always refused to talk about this). Mum raised this with me the next day and started talking about how doctors and family use directives to collude to kill old people and gave an example of something she believed had occurred with a distant family member (no evidence). I was extremely distressed but thought this conversation might be due to shock etc. I am her POA for finance and care and welfare - there is no other family except for two grandchildren living overseas.


To put this in context, I left home at the age of 16, have never asked or taken money from my parents and I am financially stable. My mother lives 2 hours drive away (does not want to move closer) and I have spent lots of money and time driving and organising her finances.


I approached our family lawyers about the ethics of continuing as her POA and they felt it was important she wrote something down about her wishes and they also suggested a second POA might make her feel more secure. They said if I withdrew, there was a risk she would not appoint anyone.


Mum is now recovering in a rehabilitation hospital for older people and is preparing to go home. As she seemed quite relaxed, I raised this issue again and asked her if she felt I would behave like this family member who "had killed his mother." She nodded and said - slightly sarcastically - that I would behave according to my world view. I felt like bursting into tears but reminded myself I am her POA and told her that my world view should not have anything to do with it - my role was to enact her wishes if she was not able to do that herself. I told her I could no longer act as her POA for health without any direction. She said she would look at the care papers and I suggested she could just write something herself if she believed the template was coercive. She has not done so.


In the meantime the rehabilitation hospital has been assessing mum thoroughly over the past 4 weeks. They say there is some evidence of cognitive decline but that is age-related only (not dementia). They agree she suffers from anxiety. What has really shocked me is they have told me that what she says to me and how she acts with me is completely different to how she acts and talks to other people. They have said I need to protect myself (in those words) and have extremely good boundaries. They said she does not see people as people - especially me.


I guess I always knew this but refused to accept it in my heart. However, I do not feel I can abandon my mother now she is 92-years-old. It feels a little late to have come to this understanding and there is a duty of care. This situation is also complicated by the fact that one of our young adult sons died tragically recently, my husband has been diagnosed with Parkinson's and was operated on yesterday for melanoma - so my resilience is really low. Mum knew about yesterday's operation and that it was also the anniversary of our son's death but rang at 4.30pm with a list of demands that needed to happen by 5pm. I checked with the hospital - those were not real.


Any advice about the POA and Advanced Care Directive would be appreciated.

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How does her Medical POA read. My Moms read like a Living Will.

If your Mom chooses not to have an advanced directive, then any decisions concerning her health, if she is not able to voice them, will be up to you as her representative. You will base your decisions on what you feel she would want or on the information you are given. DNRs come into effect only if the person is terminal. Just means no life saving measures will be taken on someone who is dying. You really don't want CPR done on someone elderly. It breaks bones.

I would not give up POAs at this point. Without them, you run the risk of someone else making life and death decisions for your Mom. You may want to tell her that, an advanced directive is for her to write down her wishes and Medical staff need to abide by her wishes. If she does not do this, than a stranger could be making her decisions for her.
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my2cents Oct 2020
Great advice. If someone won't specifically tell you, you have to make decisions based on what you believe she would want. You have no intent to do harm, so just make decision based upon your heart. That's the best we can do sometimes. I wouldn't give up POA either.
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I am so sorry for your loss, and given all you are dealing with I can only say I think you are doing very well. You have a very aged Mother who is doing quite well on her own, but who will need more care going forward. I think that you should trust yourself to take care of her in the best way.
Might I ask, if you were to choose to step away as POA for Health who would take over that position? It seems like you are comfortable now with handling the financial POA? The first year of that is the hardest, and then it becomes somewhat routine.
The questions are do you WANT to give up the POA for either Health or Financial given the fact your Mom will not or cannot participate in these decisions? Do know that EVERYONE will now ask for the Advance Directive. Feel free to tell them that your Mother won't discuss her wishes for end of life care. Not with you or with them. Nature will then take its course and you will make decisions as you NEED to make them, but NOT in advance.
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Penelope1 Oct 2020
Thank you for your response. I have asked my mother if there is someone she would prefer to be POA and she says she doesn't trust anyone to take over. So I guess she distrusts me the least. What I am hearing from responses to my question is that I need to remove my own emotion and hurt from the situation. If she will not discuss advanced care - and she is in a situation where she is unconscious and unable to communicate her wishes - then I will need to take the advice of the doctors.
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I don't think it has to be as complicated as you've made it, it seems pretty clear to me that she is in favour of as much medical intervention as possible and as long as she is able she will make her own choices. Your task (with the help of medical personnel) will be to decide when there is no reasonable hope of recovery once she is no longer capable, and fully understanding that no one is going to allow you to prematurely opt for death in someone who is not ready. Remember that she most likely won't be coming back from whatever terminal condition to berate you for your choices, unless there are other armchair quarterbacks in your family the only person you have to satisfy is yourself.
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AlvaDeer Oct 2020
I agree with this exactly. The norm is now becoming the "advance" directive. But there is no law that needs to be done. It is clear to me also her Mom wishes all care given while she lives. Her daughter can make decisions when Mom cannot.
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Does she really need an advance care directive? That is a document directing end of life care. Without one, if hospitalized, she will receive every life-saving measure the hospital can provide. Many elderly people choose to forego extreme life saving measures (and wisely so, I believe). You might describe for her (perhaps with help of some medically trained person) what life-saving measures involve e.g. a tubes in her windpipe, stomach, bladder , IVs (more than 1) a machine pumping air into her lungs...Does she really want all of that at her age? She does have the right to decline these and receive less invasive measures aimed at comfort and pain relief. Thats what an advance directive provides. But if she does not want an advance directive, so be it. It's her choice. But I think she should understand what an advance directive really is.
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Perhaps the hospital social worker could talk to your mom about this. Or does she have a religious advisor she trusts? Parents often don’t easily accept advice from their children.
It took me several years to convince my parents to do all that kind of paperwork. I finally told them if they didn’t then the doctors would make all the decisions for them. That seemed to work.
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Penelope, I just want to send (((((hugs))))).

What a lot you have on your plate.

I'm so sorry for the loss of your son. That must be devestating.

I would ask the hospital what happens if you step away as POA. For a lot of reasons, that sounds like the best idea.
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I agree with having the lawyer talk to her about what the various wishes mean. I think people believe having an advanced directive means "Don't plug me in to keep me alive." That isn't the case -- it usually means "Don't keep me alive through artificial means IF THERE IS NO CHANCE OF RECOVERY."

In other words, if you fall and knock yourself out, it doesn't mean that medical professionals shouldn't do what's needed to help you recover. It means if you accidentally decapitate yourself, they won't plug you in to keep you going until your heart wears out. (I know, terrible example, but I hope it's clear that one issue is fixable and the other is not.)

My parents' directives had multiple scenarios, not just "do nothing" or "do everything" to keep them alive. A good attorney will put together a more detailed directive, but ultimately it's up to the POA or next of kin to make the decision when she is no longer capable.
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Penelope1 Oct 2020
Thank you for your response. In the past two years my mother has had two emergency bowel resections (she doesn't have cancer) and the doctors have been remarkable and compassionate - and she recovered well. I have pointed out to her that public hospital doctors made a decision within half an hour to offer her a life-saving bowel resection at the age of 91. And she was given antibiotics when she became slightly delirious with pneumonia (as appropriate, they didn't consult me on that - they just did it. - and she recovered). I guess her comments and lack of communication could be interpreted as wanting all interventions possible, in the event that she cannot make the call herself.
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Penelope, I also lost a young adult son. I am so sorry that you are also a member of this awful club.And I'm also sorry re your husband. Your mother doesn't deserve you!
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Neither my parents or disabled sibling have advance care directives (that I have been informed about anyway). Against the idea/appathy/denial/fear - I really don't know - I have suggested...

So I too will be guided by Doctors at the time should the need arise.
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Get a better understanding about advanced care directive. This legal document outlines the types of care your mother wishes to receive or to avoid receiving if she can not make her wishes known. Most involve medical procedures like mechanical oxygenation(ventilators), rescue procedures (CPR, use of a defibrillator, and the like), and artificial means of obtaining fluids and nutrition.

Without an advanced directive, all efforts to extend her life will be used in an emergency. Nothing will be withheld in an emergency. Nothing will be withheld from your mother afterwards - except by the expressed statements of the person holding the medical POA - which should be you.

Without a medical or financial POA, you can not do "business" on your mother's behalf: take care of finances, make medical decisions, or even see her medical records. POAs only go into effect when a person is unable to make decisions for himself/herself: dementia, stroke, coma... For the sake of caring your mom who has cognitive issues, please make sure you have those POAs.
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