"She forged my name to appease her company and we do just as we like together!" my mother boasts. The companion has shared all her personal woes to my mother, drives her places when she isn't supposed to, and does whatever my mother wants. Lying to her company, forging my mother's signature (wtf: mom can write!) The lady is fighting for custody of her daughter, living with a wealthy guy who is now beating her up, and stuff like that. She sure sounds like a loser and abuser herself, but to my mother, "oh, she is so sweet." I have never met her in person. What precautions can I make? should I talk to her company?
We have a similar issue here. There are days that my mom becomes quite paranoid which she is afraid to talk about with me, her 24/7 caregiver and sometimes also her husband. Then ding-a-ling telephone rings, mom will leave the room with the phone to talk to another daughter. Then mom will tell her whatever ahe is able to, sometimes something a simple as "something is terribly wrong here". And what does sister do? She asks mom for more information that mom will sometimes not be able to answer because she doesn't know, or she will will come up with something that has absolutely no basis in reality.
If you are not able to get reliable, consistent information from your mom, leave it alone until you have substantiated that there is a legitimate concern. Reporting something like this to the agency could likely cause the caregiver unnecessary trouble with her employer. Be grateful that your mom enjoys her but before doing anything, meet and get to know the caregiver.
You WILL be sorry if you don't handle this now. There are plenty of good caregivers that abide by company rules and will still be nice to your mom.
So, yes, speak with the agency. Try to meet the caregiver if you can. As a caregiver myself, it helps to have a strong relationship with my client's family and to work together to make sure their parent has the best care possible.
Please keep us posted on how you're doing.
Carol
Carol
I feel better now! Have a great day.
Maybe the home care agency could split up the care hours with a second caregiver--that way there's another pair of eyes in the home, and if your mother starts saying the same things about the new caregiver, you know it's more likely that it's your mom and not the caregivers.
My only mission over the last 10 years has been to do anything and everything to delight my mother who has dementia. I wonder why it is that people think that they know better what the person with dementia needs than the person with dementia?
It seems to me that the daughter or son is making a judgment about what his/her mother should and shouldn't like. Maybe the mother enjoys hearing about the person's soap opera of the life - It sounds like she does based on the fact that the daughter or son says the mother is delighted. And if that's the case, why not let it continue?
What I see in this thread are whole bunch of assumptions based on a few lines of information, everyone jumping to the conclusion that the woman should be fired because the daughter doesn't like aspects about the relationship her mother has shared with her. But the mother is "delighted." Isn't the mother the one who matters most in this scenario?
Furthermore, the daughter says she hasn't even met the person… She has no way of knowing what's going on other than by what her mother tells her, and her mother doesn't seem to have any problem at all. It seems to me that the problem lies in the son's / daughter's judgment of what is appropriate or not for her mother, and s/he doesn't even live close enough by to check it out in person… who is s/he to judge?
If it were me, and my mother was delighted, I would take steps to ensure her financial safety and security, but also allow her to continue to be delighted.
So yes, my first step would be to find out more rather than to make snap judgments based on limited imformation.