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Brief History: My mother and I are estranged due to abuse as a child. We have had contact on and off over the years but due to her untreated mental health issues she has been unable to be a consistent part of my life since I was 12.
Current Day: My mother is recently in a post hospital rehab center after falling. She also has dementia. This care center needs me to sign my mom up for medicaid but I have no access to her personal info and financial records. Her brother, who is in a memory care center himself, has PoA and is unable to help. I live on the other side of the country and there is no other family close to her; I don't know who her friends are to ask for help from where I am across the country.
How can I sign her up if I have no access to any of her info? Is there any other way to get her signed up for Medicaid? (She does have Medicare -could the info they have help at all?)
Also, her independent living apartment center will not have her back because she can no longer live safely alone so the rehab care center told me 7 days ago that if I don't figure something out that they will have to take her to a shelter.

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Allow her to become a ward of the state she lives in.
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Reply to BarbBrooklyn
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Don't get involved.
It will be endless and hopeless and you might as well book constant flights right now.

You haven't been involved. Keep it that way.
Tell any who call you that:
1. I am estranged from my mother because of her mental issues.
2. I cannot/will not function for my mother in any way BECAUSE I am
A) physically unable
B) Mentally unable
C) Intellectually incapable
D) Make up a bunch more.
3. I will not be involved in getting my mother's assets together and have ZERO idea what they are and her brother POA is incapacitated so my mother will require guardianship of her state.

Wish them good luck.
No one can force you to act for a parent.
Attempting to act to an uncooperative elder is asking the IMPOSSIBLE.

Stay around the Forum and read if you need a dip into the world of aging with dementia and/or mental illness.

Lastly order from Amazon TODAY a copy of Liz Scheier's book Never Simple.
Ms. S tried to help her mother for many decades and she was clever and bright enough to access the full help of the city and state of New York Social service's safety net.
ALL TO NO AVAIL.
You need to know that your help will be hopeless, unappreciated, fought, and not as good ultimately as the help of a court appointed Fiduciary.

Sorry. Those are the sad facts.
You can choose to try another way, but I caution you: IF you take on guardianship the only way you can resign it is through the court and the court will not let you resign even IF you are physically and mentally ill.
Not everything can be fixed. That's Dr. Laura's mantra. And it has long been mine.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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They have to handle it. You have no attachments here and no responsibilities to help.
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Reply to Bulldog54321
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Let the rehab center know that you are NOT your mothers POA, and that they will have to apply for Medicaid for her and that the state will just have to take over her and her care.
And you let them know that your mother is an "unsafe discharge" (yes, use those exact words over and over if necessary)which will force the social worker at the rehab to do their job and get your mother placed in the appropriate facility pending Medicaid.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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LuijeC354r3 1 hour ago
Thank you funkygrandma59, this is helpful.
(1)
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Call APS for her county to report her as a vulnerable adult and tell them your dilemma. Don't tell them about her mental health issues, only about her suspected dementia, and even suggest she may have an untreated UTI so they may act quicker.

You have no power if you are not PoA or there in person. I'm sorry for this distressing situation.
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Reply to Geaton777
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LuijeC354r3 1 hour ago
Thank you for this helpful advice Geaton777.
(1)
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What a difficult and sad situation. Kudos to you for even being willing to help the person who, to be very blunt, mental illness or no, ruined your childhood. But you’re estranged for a good reason, and you don’t even have the information the rehab needs.

I would assume the rehab has experience with other patients who have no relatives at all who need to be enrolled in Medicaid. They seem to be wanting you to do THEIR job. I would advise them you’ve been estranged for many years due to abuse and unfortunately cannot help them, beyond perhaps giving them the name and address of the brother with POA in the memory care center, and the address of the independent living place she was in, etc.
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Reply to SnoopyLove
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LuijeC354r3 1 hour ago
Thank you SnoopyLove. This is helpful.
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