Dr. Salagubang. Tell Gabby to make an appointment with him for her Mom. I'll try to find his contact info for you. He's in the Orlando area and is the BEST geriatrician.
Moving her Mom out of state is NOT a great idea. Disorienting someone with dementia can have very poor consequences. Moving her into an ALF in her area, an area where she will still recogize the general template of things is the approach that has been demonstrated to cause the least disruption.
I promise you, I KNOW how hard this is, but right now the focus needs to be on what is the best for Mom, not the best for the daughters (to not feel guilty).
I hope that's not offensive, but it's seen all too often. Familes, with misguided senses of "duty" or thinking that they are doing what the parent would have wanted, make decisions based on emotion and not on clinical factors.
Hugs, hugs, and more hugs to you and Gabby both. I wish this whole thing didn't include such a distance between your home and her Mom.
The houselady that Pati has now won't be around for much longer, because she is elderly and has knee surgery scheduled in June. So, they need to find someone to help during the day, so that it's just the evening and nightime hours that are left to the family.
Pati's whole house smells of cigarette smoke and there are lots of extra items stored in the house, which severely limits the accessible areas of the home. Pati used to do crafts and has lots and lots of leftover items that could be sold and lots and lots of materials to make more. There is also a ton of stuff that was stored there by the Gabby's grandma and the other two sisters. All of Gabby's stuff was cleared out of the house when we moved in together. Thankfully, there are paths that lead to most of the rooms and all of the exits at this point. The most open area of the house, now finally, is Pati's bedroom, which is huge. She has been working on clearing up the extra stuff for several years now. I would love for Clean House to come in and just do their thing, but that's not going to happen.
For now, the plan is for the good sister and Gabby to take turns watching their mom. This means that every couple of weeks Gabby will travel to FL to spend a week at her mom's. I have no idea how she thinks that she is going to tend to the demands of her job and her mother at the same time, but she seems to think that it's possible, but when the woman won't take a break to make herself lunch and waits until the last possible second to come upstairs to use the potty because her clients, projects, and employees are so demanding of her time, I really just don't see how this will work without her mom or her job suffering. Gabby typically works from the moment her feet hit the floor until her head hits the pillow. The internet connection at her mom's house is pretty darn slow and with her job, she needs a really fast connection or else she just can't get much done.
When it's the good sister's week, she is planning to temporarily move into her mom's house. She will sleep on the chaise in her mom's room and her hubby will sleep upstairs. First, they have to clean out a room for her hubby. The good sister goes over to her mom's house everyday, but doesn't always see her mom. She is primarily there to take care of the alpachas, which usually requires about an hour or so in the morning and another hour or so in the evening.
If she were to be put into an assisted living facility, it would be in FL, not in GA. Gabby would love to move her mom up here to live with us, but her mom is allergic to cats and we have three of them, so that will not be happening. Plus, her mom still smokes and we both have asthma, so it's sort of anti-beneficial on both sides.
It has come to light that the problem may well be the drug Topamax. She has been taking it for about 3 to 4 years and we understand that many of the side effects of the drug are being experienced by Pati, so they have taken her off of it. We can hope that she emerges out of the altered state once her body is rid of the drug. She will still be altered by the sleeping pills and pain pills that she uses for the fibromyalgia though. It's like a neverending loop of either she is in pain or she has mental clarity.
Her heart bundle conduction issue has been there for awhile. The cardiologist says that she is not a candidate for invasive procedures, so it will just have to remain as it is.
Hopefully, Pati will be discharged from the hospital next week. They will not let her go home until they know that there is 24 hour care lined up for her.
I take no offense to anything that you said. I appreciate the help. Thank you!
