I have suspected for some time mom has a form of dementia however she has enough awareness of what is going on around her she refuses to go to the doctor. How can I trick, persuade or whatever her to go for some diagnostic testing so we can find out once and for all what her mental status is.
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Good luck,
Carol
she did but she had lucid moments and it hurt her to hear all this stuff being talked about and she remembered none of it. She would even argue the point in front of the doctor and she sounded fine so I cannot totally blame the doctors for not listening to me. Sometimes I feel like it is with our friends as well, "If they have not lived it, they do not understand it." Unfortunately it got to the point with Mom that we had to force her to go to the doctor because she did not want to leave the house. My sister and I had to finally join forces and tell her that she was going even if we had to drag her. I also talked with Mom and tried to tell her that testing was needed just to make sure she was fine and if anything was wrong get medication. This is a very hard disease and I feel for you!
In the last of the 8 years caring for Mom I reached my breaking point because I could not handle everything alone and my two sisters were not helping. I wound up hospitalized for exhaustion and told by two doctors that I was heading for a stroke or heart attack and could not keep caring for Mom so I had to leave her for the final 6 months of her life. So please take care of yourself and seek help from all siblings in your family.
Now I am in your Mom's shoes. After just two years I believe that I am now experiencing signs of dementia. It is really a two edged sword to now be on the other side. I asked my Psychiatrist/Research doctor two years ago to test me for memory loss however he felt that I was under too much stress. Now after being on Zoloft for two years I am asking to be taken off due to side effects and worsening of my memory. Am I scared, yes I am because I know where I am heading and I do not want to go there. I am 64 and have a 24 year old daughter that is just beginning her life so who will help me as I did my mother? Sometimes "knowing" is good because we can hop on the road to curing our illnesses but sometimes it is not good when you know there is no cure, you realize where you are heading and know you are taking your family down that road with you. You do not want to be a burden and yet you are fully aware that you will be and you will lose all your precious memories of the past and present and you become afraid to tell your family because what lies ahead is a downward spiral and other people take away your freedom of choice in almost every area of your life "for your own good." This is horrifying!
Love your Mom and be thankful for the lucid moments, write letters and try to explain the situation to her doctors as best as you can. Push for tests even under the guise of them being for something else. Remember that when your Mom is difficult she is not doing this on purpose, she has an illness that she cannot control and it will get worse and each day is a new "adventure," Remember she is frightened and may deny signs and symptoms, ALWAYS make her feel needed...we all need a purpose to live. Do not do everything for her, she needs to be active and able to do things on her own. Rest, you will need it and most importantly LOVE EACH OTHER!
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If her cognition is still pretty good, you may not be able to get her tested if she resists. You might just write a list of things that you've noticed and share them with her doctor. You might say that you need to see the doctor for some issue that you are having and ask her to accompany you. While she's there, the doctor can ask her a few questions. Be prepared though, because on a good day, sometimes they do really well and you end up wondering what in the hey happened.
Or what if you go in with her to get a flu shot or to review her medications. I'd make it about other things and not her state of mind. I told my cousin that she needed to have her blood work done, get medication prescriptions, physical therapy for her balance problems, etc. Once there, the doctor did a mini mental eval in the office.
HIPPA prevents her physician from replying to you. But he will be aware your concerns the next time he sees your mother.
This may sound like a frustrating approach, but sounds like you need to try everything. Good luck.
My point here as long winded as it's been, make it comfortable and when it makes sense giggle about stuff like our smoke det. story to lighten the mood take her by someplace she likes to go after appts.-my mom liked Noah's Bagels to pick some up and bring them home to have with my pop and then he'd be thrilled too--mmm food! giggle.
There was one part that I had to help my mom through and that was the pre-questionaire to have completed before the appt. A few actually were about sex and her and my dad and the questions alone intimidated her. So I just showed her we put a big slash through it and say N/A (not applicable). So she didn't have to be embarrassed no matter what the answer might be, it wasn't relevant to this interview as far as she was concerned nor did she have to explain anything to me. just zip not applicable. and we went onto next questions. And she was comfortable when we'd look over the questions from then on she knowing if it was something she felt was irrelevant or embarrassing or whatever,she was in charge if she wanted to answer it or not. And you better believe when we got close to those questions at the interviewing and I could tell they were looking at the question and saw the big N/A and I knew when they'd be coming up. I just said there will be some questions my mom felt were intrusive and embarassing to her so just skip over the one's that show N/A you will only make her uncomfortable and those were her decisions to make as far as what she feels is relevant.
My further point is to let her know she still has her own say so or not to say so. It brings confidence back into a world that's become scarey. c
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