She has always been difficult, critical, tells lies that cause trouble, is sweetness and light where it suits her and really nasty when she wants to be. It grieves us to hear her playing these games the family know so well with her lovely nursing home staff, with high-handed verbal abuse and complaining complaining complaining that for "what she is paying, your wages you know" she isn't getting the service she expects. Some of the staff just shrug it off and try to deflect her (assuming its dementia), others say "you know exactly what you are doing and it's not nice" and come to dislike her (who can blame them). Other residents don't want to know her, she never joins in and treats people with disdain. Visits can be excruciating. If we remonstrate we just get told so we are the enemy too. If we say calming things and try to deflect, we feel we are not supporting the staff who are being abused. I'd be pleased to hear from anyone who has been in the same situation. Maybe kind words and thanks to the staff and cakes for teabreak are all we can do!
I'm sorry you have such a hateful mom, but that is on her not you. When she starts showing her ass when you visit, you just get up and walk out the door and tell her that you will come back another day when she is in a better mood. And you keep doing that over and over, until perhaps she gets it.
And if she doesn't it just means that you don't have to spend as much time with her as you probably have in the past.
So at least it's a win win for you.
If she's so unpleasant during phone calls and visits, then she doesn't deserve the time you take to do so, so stop visiting and accepting her calls or calling her if she acts like a baby.
If she's always been this way, she won't change now. So you've pretty much done all you can. I'd avoid her as much as possible, she sounds like an energy vampire.
It sounds as though you have let your mother get away with this for far too long. But it's never too late to change.
Bottom line: ask the medical staff for a recommendation. My own mom was always sweet and her behaviors declined to paranoia and fears/anxiety. The doc prescribed Olanzapine/Zyprexa. 10 mg to start since she was really over the top and then 5 mg. The positive is wonderful and when we tried to wean her off per her doctor (just to see if it was helping) she went back to mean, paranoid, anxious. We will never run out of these meds. The contraindications on the box are sobering, but I researched and read the papers of research and it is worth it for my mom since she is never going to get better and her terrors are abated with that little pill.
This section may be off the topic, but you are going to see my opinion. When people get old, it would be easier to get rid of them when they have lived their lives and expect their children or other families to cater to them. Sort of like killing them off to stop burdens on their families and expensive care. Sorry I had said this and do not mean disrespect, just to get rid of burdens when it is not really companionship and love anymore. It is frustrating to think older people can outlive the younger generations.
Get mom to see a geriatric psychiatrist. She might benefit from counselling and/or medication.
We cannot be too kind to the staff. Their job is difficult in many aspects, plus they are on their feet walking most all day on an 8 hour shift. I gave a substantial gift card (Trader Joes) during the holidays. I was encouraged NOT to give money. In this situation, I wouldn't wait for a holiday. . . .
I'd bring pastries ... healthy snacks ... whatever ... a pizza for the staff.
Many caregivers or CNAs or aides in a facility cannot find other employment and have to do this work. Some are really good at it and their heart is in the right place. Others do it because they have to and don't care nor have the training or incentive to do anymore more than what is absolutely required ... and then at times they do not do the minimum.
Still. Developing good relationships with the staff, managers, and administrator is good - and can only help you - to help [the] your mother.
Make your visits short, and tell her ahead of time that you are visiting because you love her, and want to have a pleasant visit; and, that is she starts being negative or hostile, that you will leave, as this is not healthy for her nor you ( nor anyone else).
If she is cognitively able to communicate correctly ( that is she has no mental dementia illnesses as defined by her PCP) then she should be able to start to understand the consequences of her behaviors. If she in fact has a dementia diagnosed illness, then she may not be able for various reasons to identify and control her negativity and hurtful behaviors. It is not unusual for patients with dementia illness to demonstrate hostility, negativity etc. etc.\
Be sure that she is being visited frequently by a licensed social worker who is made aware of her behaviors. They may be able help .
Be sure that she is being visited frequently by her faith leader of choice or if she does not have one, then a community chaplain or other community faith leader of your choice . Providing her with both social ( emotional support via the SW) and Spiritual or faith support( via an appropriate faith of her or your choice ) may be able to help address some of her behaviors or at least offer more input for you and the staff to consider.
She may also need to have addressed long term or recent grief ( if she is cognitively/mentally able to communicate correctly). Grief associated with life experiences past or present are often not addressed with senior citizens. this may be a place to start also; a social worker or chaplain may be able to help with this also.
Practice good self care for yourselves.... you deserve it and are important also....
I regret that this happened 20 years ago so I do not recall what meds worked for her.
Your situation is difficult and I applaud your effort to get help for your mother.
Why is she in a nursing home?
I wonder if her personality / behavior is a combination of a narcissistic personality disorder and dementia?
The staff is doing what they can do: basically ignore her and do the job they are paid to do.
No, I haven't been in this situation although I had a vile client for three years**.
I called it 101 caregiving bootcamp.
It was my first ongoing/weekly job (15-20+ hours weekly) for three years. She could get very mean and demeaning (to me, as well as other residents ... one resident, legally blind, was walking in the hallway and my client, in a motorized scooter -in a hurry - said to that woman "get out of my way" as she zipped on by...
** Oh, how I remember those days wishing I had a nice client like I saw in that housing development ... I wondered how good 'life and work' could be if only I had a different client... then three years later, she died and I gained 3-5 lovely clients over the next 8 years. I did my time and paid my dues. I adored so many of my clients and still do. I couldn't leave... I desperately needed the job. The plus side is that I developed SO many skills sets as this client required just about all of them - management, shopping/research/writing, working with realtors... supervising contractors - everything I like to do and did. She was not pleasant although I loved the work ... and I learned a lot, including how to deal with a person ... like that. In all fairness to her, she had a 'nice side' where we really connected and most every night before I left, she'd thank me.
I do think ... 'but for the grace of God go I" - it is the only phrase in the bible (?) I know and I severely hope I am not like that when / as I age and need help / support from a care provider.
I am not sure what you are asking us. What should you do? What can you do?
It sounds like the staff, residents, and the family don't want much or anything to do with her ... If she were my mother, I'd med her up as much as legally possible. Mellow her out. [p.s. 'of course it is heartbreaking that a person could be so miserable. Imagine how she must feel inside ... to herself. Get her a massage, weekly. And perhaps a therapist].
Gena / Touch Matters
He has managed to make life a living hell for us since he has been there - because he was used to getting his way and used to the immediate meeting of his needs thanks to years of jumping when he said jump first by MIL and then by SIL. And he simply cannot wrap his brain around the fact that the world does not revolve around him. So of course no one ever does anything to his standards, quickly enough, well enough, the food is not good enough, the people are "old", THEY have problems (as they roll down the hall in their wheelchairs while he watches from his bed because he still hasn't been cleared by PT to even get out of the bed without help yet! The list goes on and on. Sufficed to say...he's driving us all crazy...And I'm almost certain it is on purpose.
The staff there are wonderful and take it all in stride. He has caused them more problems than anyone has a right to in his short tenure, but they don't even seem phased by it. While we sit and worry that he'll get himself kicked out.
LOL, unlike you - we have no qualms about remonstrating him. We just tell him to knock it off and be nice. That he needs them a lot more than they need him. He pulled a fast one the other day and broke the rules and we were immediately as a family conferencing him in and having a "Come to Jesus". He was pouting because he got in trouble and lying that he didn't know he had done anything wrong and we just told him that he knew exactly what he did and now he had lost his privileges and there were consequences for his actions.
We don't know yet if other residents will want to know him. He doesn't want to know them. He avoids them. He went to the dining hall exactly once and said he would never go back - because "those people didn't talk to me". We asked "well did you talk to them? Smile? Say hello?" His response? "Well what difference does that make?" Yeah that's about what we figured.
Now he's killed his phone - somehow deleted his contacts. And until we visit in a few days, he can't get them back. (there is no point in calling cell company - he'll never be able to do what they need him to do, and we would never ask anyone there to help him- even though he would). He was pouting saying that he talks to his FRIENDS every day on the phone and now he can't talk to them. Finally after all of the whining. and him calling me 8 times in 15 minutes on the first day it happened and at least that many times the second day, he said it again "I talk to my FRIENDS every day on the phone and I can't now!"
I said "YOUR FRIENDS HAVE YOUR NUMBER DON'T THEY? If you talk to them EVERY DAY why have they all called YOU? It seems odd to me that you all talk every single day but now that you don't have their numbers and you can't call them, you haven't talked to them at all! Why aren't they calling you?" "Well I'm sure there is something wrong with this phone!!! I need to call the phone company!" (for the record - nothing wrong with the phone).
Hang in there. The staff really is trained to deal with all kinds of stuff that we cringe at. It doesn't mean they SHOULD have to. But they know how to and they can. They are saints and they don't get paid enough that's for sure!
Unless you know the staff can make bad life threatening decisions, in which case, you need to move your Mom out of the facility.
...and just to be fair, if the story your Mom is telling is plausible, side with the staff ("Oh I'm sure there is a reason for that"), then start asking probing questions to your Mom to see if the story really is the whole story. If there is enough evidence to wonder, ask the staff for their version.
Just in case something really happens to your Mom, you don't want to completely shut her down. You do want to know if the facility is not performing up to your expectations, and your Mom is the person who would alert you.
Funny story: My Mom is in MC. For successive days, my Mom said that the staff did not give her a bath. Her hair looked like it had not gotten washed and her odor was "different." so the story was plausible. When I talked to the staff, they said that my Mom was refusing to bathe, saying that she didn't need it or thinking she had already taken one. I went back to my Mom and I said, "I heard you are refusing to take a bath." She said "they try to give me a bath 2 times in the same day and I tell them I don't need it." I told my Mom, "If they ask you to take a bath, you take that bath. I don't care whether you thought you already had one or not, just take the damn bath." She argued, I repeated myself. That night, when the caregiver came to give her a bath, she said "I know I already had a bath today. But, I better take the second bath or my daughter is going to be mad at me." We all got a good laugh. Success!