Mom with dementia


My 81 year old mom was diagnosed with dementia about a year ago. It just recently just got really bad really fast. I live about an hour away and help a lot with stuff but can't be there every day. I'm having a tough time getting her to take her meds & getting her to remember things. Does anyone have any ideas. Sticky notes, big calendars or anything like that worked for you & your parents. Any help is appreciated. I've been looking on line for articles or books about this stuff, but can't seem to find anything.
Thanks to all of you!
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I can attest to what Victoria2020 said about the reminder tools not working for very long. They only worked for about 4 months with my mother. She's been living alone and I visit 2 times per week to check on her. At this point she can't remember to take meds, eat, drink, bathe, etc. without my prompting and/or insisting. When I visited yesterday, the smoke alarm was chirping loudly. I asked her what that noise was and she didn't know. She also didn't know how long it had been chirping. I explained to her that the chirping was coming from the smoke alarm and that it needed attention. For the next 20 minutes while we were waiting for maintenance to come fix it, she asked me 4 or 5 times about the noise. That confirmed what I had already decided - that the move to memory care at the end of this month is absolutely necessary for her health and safety. She won't like it one bit, but I don't see any other viable option since she has loudly and repeatedly refused to accept/tolerate paid help at home.
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She is fine with showering, getting around & stuff like that. My brother does live close to her and handles her money & visits her 1-2 times a week, but he is not in the greatest health. I see her usually twice a week & handle her medical & Dr appts things like that. The huge thing right now is her meds. Maybe things like using her remote control & thermostat.
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Hi conmel99,
Since you're saying this seems like a very sudden change it might be a good thing to get her to her doctor and checked for a UTI.
Because the disease takes away immediate memories first, the things that work best are usually things that the person has always done. If she doesn't check a calendar every day for a to-do list, she won't remember now to start using one. It sounds like she's not safe to be at home alone if it's just her.
A lot of people here have a story about their come-to-Jesus dementia moment when they understood how compromised their loved one was. It takes so long to realize how far along they are because they can still do things like carry on a coherent conversation, so they sound ok, but they aren't.
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Anytime a PWD seems to have progressed from one stage to another, it is prudent to check for something like a UTI. Such infections can be silent as in "no symptoms" and wreak cognitive havoc in the elderly even without dementia.
That said, sometimes it's hard to recognize subtle changes in cognition if your visits are typically several hours during the day rather than several days of 24/7 during which you might see a very different level of function. I have a friend who was a devoted daughter who saw her mom daily collecting her around 1pm and spending the afternoon and evening together until she brought mom home around 8pm. She knew mom was having a cognitive shift and thought she was proactive in moving mom into her home but discovered after living with her 24/7 and prepping her mom's place for sale just how lucky she'd been in avoiding a disaster. Ironically, because I didn't see my dad as often and had to stay over when I did, I had a clearer picture of dad's deficits than my friend did.
People often ask about medication management and the short answer is that sometimes an electronic pill dispenser can be effective for a short time for some PWD but at the end of the day there is no substitute for human supervision. Forgetting meds is more of an IADL than an ADL like dressing/bathing. Thinks of ADLs as those skills we learned as young children- bathing, dressing, self-feeding; IADLs are more of the "adulting" skills we learn as teens and young adults like driving, paying bills, handling emergencies. I trusted my kid to handle his own showers by the time he was 6-ish but I dispensed his meds myself until he was in high school.
It might be better, if she can afford it, to bring in a home health aide to supervise meds daily if you or your brother can't make certain she's doing this properly. I have heard of some folks using FaceTime to make sure their cooperative parent takes their meds in the early stages which worked so long as the parents remembered how to use their smartphone.
Regardless, this is a wakeup call to put together a Plan B with your brother for future care as she will need 24/7 care fairly soon. The link below is a checklist of symptoms and stage in which they typically happen. Most folks straddle stages at times IME.
Tam-Cummings-LLC-Handouts.pdf (tala.org)
HB
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How is she shopping/cooking meals? Does she remember to turn off the stove? Or the water in the sink/tub? Can you check her banking activity to be sure she is paying necessary bills but not being scammed? Does she still drive, and has she forgotten how to get to local places that she often visits? If she is forgetting routine meds, other routines can be affected too. And medication mistakes are a big danger with potential for disastrous consequences, depending on what she has In her cabinet.
All of this you can assess by staying with her for a few days. You might have to sleuth it out though - people can be very good at trying to mask their problems in the earlier stages.
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Commonly Used Abbreviations
DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
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