I speak to my mother several times a day. She never remembers that I visit her, take her out and call her. Around 3pm till 7pm she starts chain calling me and leaving upsetting messages then others when she gets tired of calling me and I get tired of answering. Would it be wrong to ask the caregiver to disconnect the phone after 3pm or would that worsen the situation? I can't relax or enjoy my afternoon anticipating the calls asking me to take her to her mother's house or ask me over and over about family members that if alive would be over 110 years old.
I'd turn off my phone if I were you, or the ringer at least. You can ask the CG to unplug moms phone, too, and see how it goes, but I'd ask for calming meds first and foremost.
Dementia is the worst, and I wish you and mom the best of luck with all of this.
You can put her on no call if you have a smart phone or you can put your phone on do not disturb.
You do not have to answer and you also do not have to listen to it ring.
You have a right to your peace and privacy, and she won't remember she called and you didn't answer. Or, if you want to have fun, converse and tell her what she wants to hear. "Why, yes, I heard from Aunt Mehitabelle just last week. She said to tell you she'll visit as soon as she gets back from Istanbul." No harm in making the conversation interesting for both of you.
I had also considered a phone that could only accept incoming calls.
But she lost her phone skills pretty early in her dementia. For 20 years she refused to try the cordless phone we’d bought her, so she still used rotary dial and push button table phones. I noticed she’d often hang up incorrectly.
Address the sundowning as it as it may present in other ways such as wandering.
The care giver will call if there is an issue.
IMO you talk to her too many times as it is, several times a day? What for?
Set your boundary and stick to it, the ball is in your court.
Why do the calls start at 3 then end at 7?
How many others is she calling?
The caregivers should be redirecting her, keeping her occupied during this time. (If there are caregivers there with her)
If the calls are bothersome to others they can block the number as well.
You can elect not to answer the calls either by blocking the number during the hours you do not want to be disturbed or letting the calls go to voicemail.
The decision to remove the phone might boil down to safety.
If this is a landline and you call 911 the dispatcher is aware of the address.
If you call 911 on a cellphone unless the area has "enhanced 911 service" the dispatcher may not know where the call is coming from and getting prompt help might not be possible.
What would happen if you just didn't answer the calls (block the number or just let it ring?) Does the caregiver know how to get hold of you if you did not answer your phone?
I don't think you should remove the phone. Your Mom doesn't see anything wrong in her actions. On top of that, in her mind, to her, everything is important enough for you to be notified. That being said, you need to do something on your end (e.g. block the call, let it ring and let it go to v-mail.). However, what ever you do, you still need to be available so that either the Head Nurse or the caregiver can get hold of you during these times. If you remove the phone, your Mom may feel abandoned, and that will lead to a different set of behavior problems.
The other issue could be that she is lonely. Is she in a group setting or is it only her and a caregiver? If she is in a group setting, talk to the Head Nurse to see what they recommend to do. If it is just her and the caregiver, see if the caregiver could play some games or do exercises with her during this time period to distract her.
Contrary to popular belief, people with dementia can learn new behaviors. It just takes them longer to learn the lesson.
Before you implement any suggestion about not answering the phone, you need to tell the Head Nurse and the caregiver how to get hold of you during these times.
Good luck!
It definitely sounds like your mom is sundowning. Meds can help. You've gotten suggestions from other posters to block the number or remove the phone all together during certain hours. Either of those ideas would help unless she follows suit with my mom and has the caregivers call you.
Good Luck Taco Beef.
There is a "drop in" feature, where the video blurs the sound is muted for 1 minute at first, so that the person can either turn it off if they want to (she never does) or can prepare for the video cam to come on. (it is simply an intercom between you and them). We can also manage the calls from our end and the set up for her to make "calls".
CAVEAT: you may find that you need someone with technical skills to help set it up and make sure that the facility will allow it. But it has been truly a God-send for us in successfully communicating with her, now that she cannot use a phone. Gives her great peace of mind to actually be able to see us, too.
Another good thing to try is a Lively mobile Plus pendant. https://www.lively.com/medical-alerts/lively-mobile-plus/
It is a small silver pendant with a button hangs around the neck. It is literally a GPS mobile phone with a small speaker (it can locate them no matter where they are) in this small silver pendant. It also has very good fall detection and is water proof so they can keep it on even in the shower (highly recommended).
The pendant also has a Lively Link app that goes with it. You can set it up on your mobile phone and it will literally show you on a GPS map no matter where they are when they are wearing the pendant. This is especially good for people who may still be driving and you want to know where they are. We used this a good bit while she was still able to drive and was living at home by herself before her fall and move to AL.
If your loved one needs help or has a question or there is an emergency, all they need to do is to press the button on the small pendant. Lively has 24 hour monitored service with live trained agents who will immediately call them live directly on the pendant whenever the button is pushed. The agent will talk with them and ask if they are ok, if they need help, or something else, and your loved one can talk directly to them through the pendant (its literally a small mobile phone with it's own number).
The agent is trained to help them (seniors) anyway they can. We have used this a number of times and has been a great comfort in knowing she has a way to communicate even outside of the facility if something is wrong or she needs emergency help when they may not know it right away. Also it was a life saver when mom fell outside in her garage during the winter time initially It detected the fall and they immediately called her and asked if she was ok and then called 911 to dispatch the Emergency Response Service to come take her to the hospital for emergency surgery.
I pray this is helpful to you and others on this list.
It is important.
Is someone with your mom 24/7?
It sounds like your mom would not be able to use the phone to call anyone if / in an emergency anyway.
I wonder if you can give your mom a separate number .... to call "you" which is some kind of music station (not calling you).
I support you 100% percent in doing whatever you need to do.
Your mom doesn't know what she is doing and will continue.
Is there someone with her mom during 3pm-7pm?
If there is a caregiver there, why is your mom 'being allowed' to call you non-stop? The caregiver / someone needs to re-focus her attention somehow during this time. If no one there, could there be?
She is scared, fearful and reaching out to the person most familiar to her - do have someone there to (try to) comfort her).
This could be sundowners (syndrome) - ?
Gena / Touch Matters
If the caregiver is someone you are in charge of, try to find out what is going on there. If the caregiver is not, then consider visiting there and finding out for yourself what is happening. I hope she is in her own home yet, because the facilities that people put the loved ones into are often abusive.
If everything is all right then just do your best to let her know she is ok and that you will be over to see her as soon as you can.
It would also not be wrong to block your mother's number from your phone then you create a phone schedule of times that you will call her to talk.
The caregiver should have access to your number through their own private cellphone so they could call you for an emergency. Other than that, I think you should block your mother's number and start calling her on a schedule.