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Refusing to take meds

This is a new problem for us. My DH is pitching a FIT when it’s time to take his meds. He absolutely refuses to do so. I’m probably not doing this right, but I beg him to take them for his dr’s sake. Last night I begged him to take them for Cody, that’s the dog. He did.
He started chewing them a few weeks back, so I started crushing them and using pudding/applesauce. Still a fight. I’m going to talk to all of the prescribing docs and see which pills he absolutely must take and eliminate ones that don’t make sense anymore.
What has worked for others? Why does everything about this dang disease have to be so difficult?

Comments

  • Scooterr
    Scooterr Member Posts: 198
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    Good ideal to eliminate meds that are no longer needed, after consulting DH physicians. I too done the same thing, the only problem I did run into was that some of my DW physicians did not want to. Even though I knew the medication was no longer working (it was part of their money game). So that being said, I took it upon myself to start cutting her back on those meds I knew was no longer working (which involved a long process of weaning her off those meds.) which I was glad I did. Is your DH cognitive to knew you're crushing his meds and putting them in his food? Is he seeing you crush the meds and putting them in his pudding and apple sauce? If so you may have to make sure he is not watching and you may have to switch food also, maybe yogurt, or ice-cream. I had the same problem with DW that you're having with your DH. And yes you're right everything with this disease is difficult.

  • marier
    marier Member Posts: 118
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    My DH started balking at taking much needed medication a few years ago. I started agreeing he didn't need medication and then removed a one or two pills from the mix. Those pills were vitamins I had placed with the other needed medication. Once I removed the vitamins he was compliant for awhile then when he refused all meds I began crushing and placed in food without his knowledge. I also found just walking away and agreeing he didn't medication and then trying in about 30 minutes later worked for awhile too. It is hit and miss. What works one day may not work the next.

  • Metta
    Metta Member Posts: 45
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    This has been an occasional hiccup for us as well. Marier's suggestion to walk away and try later has worked. If it becomes a fight, DH will never give in. If I avoid a conflict, keep a happy tone, and drop the subject to try again in an hour, that has worked.

  • Dio
    Dio Member Posts: 856
    250 Likes 250 Care Reactions 500 Comments Third Anniversary
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    There was a time when DH wouldn't take his meds, too, claiming that they were just placebos. This was before he was diagnosed with dementia. I just thought he was being difficult on purpose. So I slammed the meds on the table, pushed them toward him and said, "Here are your meds. Take them or leave them. Up to you. I did my job," and I walked away. I think he ended up taking them, but it was such a drawn out drama each time. I was exhausted emotionally. But this phase did pass, thankfully.

  • tonyac2
    tonyac2 Member Posts: 86
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    As soon as he sees a spoonful of pudding/applesauce he wigs out. I’m trying to figure out the root of the opposition but not getting anywhere. This AM, saying will you take them for the dog worked again. I hate med time.

  • Rick4407
    Rick4407 Member Posts: 262
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    I also used applesauce and pudding for meds. But it was always something we both had. After lunch or after dinner we both had a "treat" my DW's always had the meds. Doing things together seemed to make it normal. Rick

  • Quilting brings calm
    Quilting brings calm Member Posts: 2,926
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    My mom had an undiagnosed UTI at the beginning of her dementia journey. She started refusing her meds because she was sure we were poisoning her. It didn’t matter if we set the pill reminder tray in front of her, or took the pills from the tray and attempted to hand them to her. She would take them if one of her friends or a visiting nurse handed them to her. We had a visiting nurse because the doctors said her health was failing. Eventually a different set of doctors diagnosed her with urosepsis. Once she was treated, we didn’t have any more issues with meds.

  •  Bridge4
    Bridge4 Member Posts: 56
    Second Anniversary 25 Care Reactions 25 Insightfuls Reactions 25 Likes
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    I love your idea of having him do it for the dog! My Stage 5 DW has lots of anger and criticism/harsh words for almost everyone, especially me, but has a deep adoration for our dog, which grows more intense as my DW progresses. She would do anything for her fur baby, so this could be a very useful strategy to create an emotional connection when nothing else works.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 59
    100 Care Reactions 25 Likes 10 Comments First Anniversary
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    We struggled with the meds issue also. Once my dear wife progressed into maybe stage 4, she just decided she was not taking meds any longer. This was after she had started on one med for her dementia but in conjunction with her normal meds. She would pick out select meds and throw them away. Sometimes she would toss them all. Tried crushing and hiding them in pudding, dissolving in drinks, mixing in her food. Tried everything anyone could suggest. My wife, in jest, was psychic. Never let her see us mixing the meds, crushing, dissolving, etc. but she somehow knew and would discard that specific food item or beverage. The caregivers, nurse and I would watch in amazement and try the next trick. In short order nothing worked. Her PCP finally said to drop any and all meds that were not critical. Tried that without success. The hot and miss success with her finally got to much more miss and I stopped the fight. She was advancing, there was no way to stop it and these battles were ruining what little pleasure we still had in our life. Fortunately her PCP understood and finally said do what helps her have the best day she can, she will lose in the end but make the trip as good as it can be for her. As hospice began to need to administer more comfort meds we found an injection of haldol would work when explained as the "flu" shot. Because she would forget quickly, repeating the injection every two week as the flu shot worked. At the end she would allow some crushed meds in her chocolate pudding if I carefully crushed and hide it. By then she could barely notice it any longer. I guess my two cents in this discussion is the conclusion from our PCP, we know the outcome, we cannot stop it nor significantly alter it, let their days be as good as they can be even if foregoing the regular meds hastens the end. Eliminating the med battle allowed me to focus on doing what she enjoyed to make her day as good as it can be.

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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