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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!

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I think you answered your own question in your very last sentence when you said that perhaps just kind words and thanks to the staff along with some occasional goodies is all you can do. That can go a long way.
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.
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BertieBanks Apr 2023
Thank you funkygrandma59. That is very sound advice. However, a walk out would mean careful arrangements for responsibilites at home and an eight hour journey (there and back) for a non-visit every time! I'll stick with the last sentence for which your support is much appreciated.
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Go with the kind words, thanks and snacks for tea break. In an effort to make the staff's work a little easier: I added an assortment of air fresheners and a mini portable fan for my mom's tiny bathroom. Be sure to "report" all the good things that normally go unnoticed.
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betskand May 2023
EXCELLENT idea.
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As a retired NH clinical staff member we all knew nasty residents. We felt bad for the families. We were less stressed by these older gals {seldom were the men as disagreeable}…I suggest you remember it is NOT your job to make her happy..you provide a safe place. It is her job to find a way to navigate in the world..even in the NH world. Do short visits..leave when she is mean. If she wants visits she will learn to play nice!!
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The staff should be used to, and trained, to handle this, so it's their problem.

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.
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BertieBanks Apr 2023
Thank you ZippyZee. You are right: she won't change now. I need to change yes, and see it as the staff's problem. Poor things!
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Send thank you note to the staff and maybe a snack - tell them you know mom is difficult and you appreciate their hard work.

Get mom to see a geriatric psychiatrist. She might benefit from counselling and/or medication.
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TouchMatters May 2023
Excellent advice / feedback, encouragement.

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.
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My sisters MIL was a self absorbed person her whole life. When she experienced dementia and inability to self care, she lived with them. My sister and her husband took her to the doctor and explained the situation. The foul language, lies, confabulations etc. were minimized with what my sis called her Happy Pill. I don’t know what it was, but it decreased the anxiousness and managed to soothe the old lady. Unfortunately, my sister wasn’t great about keeping a supply so the poor woman would run out and exhibit the behaviors that the med was modifying.
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.
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As a hospital staff, I got training. You have to separate the personality from the disease and sometimes the gap is short. I have seen many mean people in my career. They tended to isolate themselves, and the constant callers would just keep calling. Let the staff deal with it. As for visits, make them shorter and call her on her abuse that the next thing she says will mean that you are unwelcome.
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Definitely side with the staff. When in doubt, side with the staff. You and the staff need to look like you are in complete agreement with her care.

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!
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Beatty May 2023
Oh wow! Snap!
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I don't have an answer for you. My mom was a nightmare in her facilities..yes plural! She eventually managed to escape to her own apartment years ago. She now lives in low income housing with home health. I can image majority of patients in a nursing home are negative. It's not a great place to be. You need to assume the staff are professionals and can regulate themselves majority of the time to handle the behaviors in a professional and appropriate way. There are methods to handle grouchy and mean residents. Some staff take it way too personally. Some know exactly what to say to de-escalate.
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BertieBanks Apr 2023
I'm sorry you had this trouble too. Yes, and its the young, untrained, more inexperienced ones who do take it more personally. It is very sad though to see young girls, with very poor pay, in their first jobs, getting such negative feedback. Thank you for your response.
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I’d suggest that you minimise visits, and take with you a packet of nice sweets. When mother is rude to staff when you are there, give a sweetie to the staff member and say “Thank you for putting up with it”. Leave when you get told you are the enemy too. Tell mother that if she thinks she employs the staff and pays their wages, she will need to go for a sanity test.

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.
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betskand May 2023
I love the idea of giving sweets to staff or helpers when the patient is rude or cruel. When I have taken hubby to procedures and he has been awful to people (I heard his nurse outside trying to convince another nurse to trade patients. She refused) I have made a special effort to apologize and do as many small helps as I can...but of course that puts ME in the firing line. I keep reminding myself of the Buddha's statement that the primary quality of life (of anything -- places, people, cultures, ideas) is impermanence. I now find the idea that I will die to be cheering, not frightening.
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