I took her to the Dr and there is no infection. I closed the bathroom door as an solution, but she gets very upset, that she will leave for ever. No matter is you try to keep her busy, the bathroom is just an obsession. Please give me some advise what to do. It's so frustrating.
Sounds like you need to place your mom in a facility for your good and hers. You are showing a lot of stress and it would be better for all of you if she wasn't with you in your home.
I'm real frustrated with my mom too. She talks incessantly and asks the same questions hundreds of times a day. Sometimes I want to scream and sometimes I do!
My mom is a narcissist and a super serious person. She couldn't smile if she wanted to. Unfortunately, she's miserable and makes everyone else that way. This type of behavior negatively affects the caregiver. A person can only take so much before they blow.
Please check your local library for a Senior Guide for housing, Assisted Living, Memory Care and other options. The booklet is behind the counter, just ask the librarian for it.
It sounds as though you're at the end of your rope. Place her in a facility soon, before you act out physically on your anger.
Pysch specialist in a weeks time.
Despite wearing depends - she would still dribble on the rug and her slippers during the night getting to the loo - she won't go in a diaper even when hospitalized - says she's not a baby
The worst was when she would try to wash out the depends and it disintegrated in the sink - time and a half to call a plumber on Sunday - finally got her to toss the dirty ones in the bath tub and I'd throw them away in the morning
If I get exacerbated when she has to go again after just taking her - she replies, "you'll be old some day." LOL.
My husband thought he needed to pee repeatedly all night long. His doctor guessed that maybe enlarged prostate glands were exerting pressure when he reclined. We tried saw palmetto and after a few weeks it did indeed solve the problem. Obviously this isn't a solution for a little ol' lady, but the point is if there is a physical cause then a physical solution will help. Has the family discussed this with her medical team?
My mother will sometimes say she needs to go minutes after she has just been helped to and from the toilet by two aides with a lift machine. In her case I think she vaguely remembers needing to go but doesn't remember that she has. Distraction almost always works for that.
I agree that your client might benefit from something for her anxiety. Is there a prescription you could give prn?
Most days try to grin and bear it knowing there will be a day I will WISH she could still go to BR on her own. But after getting downsized and only working par-time it is hard to see that go down the drain ; ). Toilet Paper is EXPENSIVE these days.
And when they actually become used, it's not a hard transition into the brief style.
Could it be an OCD-like fixation (or perseveration to use a fancy word)? If she's going through the motions of this process over & over & over as if she is compelled, but isn't having actual continence issues, I would talk to her doctor about an anti-anxiety medication. Something to consider anyway.
If she is having accidents, or is actually peeing-even just a tiny bit- while in the bathroom, I'd talk to her doctor about over active bladder relief. It may also be time to consider "confidence products" of some sort, which could offer relief even as a placebo. Or all of the above.
My mom's anxiety was not adequately controlled and it came out various ways that we all missed at the time. One way was potty fixation. Before being totally incontinent for real, she was absolutely paranoid about having a leak or accident, so she would wear 3 poise pads and briefs at the same time.
She also spent enormous amounts of time in the bathroom on the toilet many times a day doing ritualistic preventive peeing. If nothing came out, it would upset her, causing more anxiety. It would take her insane amounts of time to get ready to just walk down the hall to the dining room. Forget about going anywhere on time. Having that many pads in her pants made her waddle like a toddler. Now that I think about it, having to be somewhere probably jacked up her anxiety and made it worse. She started refusing liquids, which created urinary problems that weren't there before. Self-fulfilling prophecy in a way.
Get up - go potty for 20 minutes. Take a shower - go potty for half an hour. Dry off - go potty for 20 minutes. Brush teeth - go potty. Get partly dressed - go potty. Etc.
If we happened to be out & about, I started to expect that we'd spend more time in the public bathroom than doing our errand. I started refusing to stand in the stall with her. (What am I - 4 years old? Gross.) Then I started refusing to stand in the bathroom with her. Gag.
All that time, it never clicked with me that this was a manifestation of OCD.
She was also manic about buying pads & briefs every time we left the house. I had more products than the entire Depends factory. It was more than anybody would use in a lifetime, but her preoccupation was with running out. When she moved into a senior apartment, she could order them and they'd be delivered into her apartment, so the supply quadrupled in a short time.
Once we got her anxiety and paranoia under better control due to a different crisis, this fixation went away and I never heard her talk about it again.
Later on, she actually did become totally incontinent, but was in skilled nursing where the disposable products are provided by the facility.
I left probably 4 contractor-sized trash bags full of continence supplies in the apartment laundry room with a "free for you" sign on them.
Time to get non-strippable pajamas for your husband. Google them.
They are made with all fastenings in the back, so the caregiver can undo it, but not the person wearing them. It looks kind of like a one piece footy-pajama, but the zipper is in the back.
Also talk to his doctor about sleep disturbance and walking around at night. This sounds like more than a mobility problem. At this point, it may just be to the bathroom, but what if it turns into going outside? Need to make a plan for that and be prepared.
Have him checked for a UTI or prostate problem as well. That can affect male continence in a big way.