Follow
Share

My grandmother who I take care of in my home has been in adult diapers for years for urinary incontinence. She moved in with me last year and was going to the toilet for #2 with a cane and letting someone know to help her. It soon progressed to putting a potty chair beside the bed because she didn't want to walk to the bathroom anymore. Then she started having these "spells" every time she got on the bedside potty to poop and she would beg and plead or yell and scream and threaten (whatever she can do to get her way) to put her back in bed even though she wasn't done or cleaned up. After that she started wanting me to change her laying down instead of with her sitting/standing on the side of the bed when she is capable of doing so. I have had seveal talks with her as well as my mother about her needing to at least sit on the side of the bed to change but she doesn't want to and doesn't seem to care. We have even explained to her that if she doesn't try to cooperate and it gets too hard for me that she will have to go to a nursing home. She has dementia and thinks that we can't put her in a home if she doesn't want to go. She doesn't get out of bed at all anymore, even to eat at the table in her powerchair, which she used to do when she first moved in with me. She now goes #2 in her diaper and doesn't tell me until she is done so she doesn't have to sit on the potty. She has dementia but also has always been a manipulative selfish person. It's so stressful and it's taking a toll on me mentally and physically. What should I do?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Unless you can hire help to come to the house to take care of your grandma so you don't get burned out completely, it is really time to move her to a nursing home. You should start making arrangement.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

It's either time to hire some full-time help(with her money) for her in your home, or time to get her placed in a memory care facility. With her dementia, things will only continue to get worse, not better, so at this point you have to do what's not only best for you, but what is best for her as well. And honestly, a memory care facility is probably the best answer for all involved. Best wishes.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

As you have stated in your post, she has dementia. This means you should have no expectations of changing or "improving" her behavior or hoping she will learn new things. She can't. She has dementia. Teepa Snow has some very informative and entertaining videos about dementia on YouTube. It may help you to educate yourself more on this subject for your own mental wellbeing.

The question now is: how much hands-on care are you (or any other family member) willing to provide knowing grandma will keep declining mentally and physically? If she won't get out of bed she runs the risk of getting bed sores. Having to move her around in bed can result in back injuries to the caregiver, as many many retired RNs on this forum can testify to. My MIL is 85 with very mild dementia and short-term memory loss and won't get out of bed for any reason. She weighs 185 and is 5'7". There was no way anyone would be moving this woman around as dead weight. She is in LTC on Medicaid in a nice facility and is doing fine.

I'm hoping you are being paid out of your grandma's funds for the care you are providing? If not this is a whole other important discussion. I wish you all the best!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Check her skin. If there's nothing there, get her pelvis and her tailbone checked for possible fractures. Something's hurting her.

What's her bowel habit like, by the way? - any constipation, or the opposite?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter