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I just had to ask how much time he has left

tboard
tboard Member Posts: 152
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My husband's doctor has been strongly suggesting that I put my husband in memory care. There are days when that option seems attractive but it is unaffordable. I asked the doctor how long he thinks my DH will live. I was shocked when he said "about a year". DH has mixed dementia, Alzhiemer's and Vascular dementia. He is still ambulatory. He talks but doesn't make a lot of sense.

I haven't told our adult children or anyone about this. I guess I am still processing. DH was in the room but I am sure he doesn't understand.

We have been through hell with his dementia, yet I can not imagine a life without him. We have been married for 46 years. I won't mind being able to sleep when I need to and I won't miss being screamed at and verbally abused as I clean him up.

I can not picture myself living alone. I cannot even imagine it. I feel lost.

The doctor is just taking an educated guess.

There were some test results that came back as abnormal from that appointment and the doctor said that we will address it next year if it gets worse. Does he mean that it doesn't matter because my DH isn't going to live long?

Maybe I should not have asked. Maybe the doctor is wrong. I doubt I will share this with the family. Yet I am telling them that they need to prepare themselves because we won't live forever.

Do you want to know how long your spouse with dementia will live?

Comments

  • harshedbuzz
    harshedbuzz Member Posts: 5,795
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    edited October 2

    I'm not a spouse, but I absolutely wanted a rough idea. Dad's doctors wouldn't provide a timeline. His diagnosing neurologist said he could live with dementia "10, 15 or even 20 years"). I did a lit search on the topic, factored in when I saw the first symptoms, his mixed-dementia diagnosis (Alz and WKS) and came up with a guess that turned out to be quite accurate.

    I'm a planner by nature about my parents' assets being used up on dad (whose dementia was alcohol-related plus Alz) leaving mom (who will likely need care at some point) without the funds needed to buy into a nicer facility before converting to Medicaid.

    HB

    ETA: Given the terminal nature of the diagnosis, testing is something you may wish to reconsider. The thing to ask yourself it "what are we going to do with this information?" If he's progressed to the degree you need to clean him up and the doctor feels he's a candidate for a MCF, it may be time to stop routine diagnostic testing and focus on comfort and mood.

    When dad went to MC in stage 6, his doctor moved to a more palliative approach stopping his BP, statin and metformin. The first because he no longer needed it and the latter 2 because the benefits no longer outweighed the side effects.

    Even with my soon to be 88-year-old mom who does not have dementia, her PCP is less aggressive around certain kinds of testing.

    HB

  • BikingOldMan
    BikingOldMan Member Posts: 21
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    Am very glad to hear that!

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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