Our parents live on about $1200 a month and pay almost half of that in health care premiums. They live in a remote desert town with minimal healthcare services. Our father is 89 and still driving when he probably shouldn't be. They are stubborn and won't take advice. We can't afford anywhere else for them to live and we can no longer always provide the transportation and help they need. They make bad decisions and cause more problems for themselves.
Grace + peace,
Bob
But we all do send you our empathy and prayers. This is hard.
Do they have neighbors who could be paid to drive them places???? If so, you could disengage their car somehow. You can't afford to have them kill someone else. That would be a truly worst case scenario.
Hugs!
As for your parents being stubborn, I think we all are to some degree or another. Call it becoming set in our ways as we age. The longer we've been doing the same thing, the more ingrained it will become into us. This is why we become stubborn, because things we've been doing for so long become part of us because their second nature. Another thing to consider is that maybe your parents actually like it in their current location and they really don't want to move. Therefore, I can't really say that I blame them because living out in a wide open space is normally very expensive. I'm sure that there are things your parents really like about this area including the wide-open space. If your parents happen to be competent enough to make their own decisions, this may be one of those particular situations where you might have to step back and let whatever happens happen as sad and hard as it may be to watch. As hard as it may be, we may have to lat go and let our love ones make their own mistakes face their own consequences. Given enough times you can only hope that they will come to a point of realizing that something needs to change. Sometimes letting go and stepping back is the only option no matter what happens. Again, I know this is hard, but I had to do it with my surrogate dad at one point. You can only do so much before you've reached your limit. When you reach your limit, sometimes the only thing left to do is to step back when you're out of options and you can't get any help. The only other thing besides stepping back is to alert the APS closest to your parents. As for your dad driving, I can only wonder if he has had any accidents. If he's had no accidents, then other things should be considered such as dementia and Alzheimer's. In order to live in a remote area where vehicles are needed, a person must be able to handle such living arrangements. If your parents are no longer able to handle this kind of living arrangement, and you've tried everything possible to help them to no avail, then it's time to step back. If your dad is mentally stable enough to drive, then I'm not sure there is really going to be much of anything you can do about him driving. If by chance he's mentally able to drive and he has had no accidents then that's a very good thing. As long as he poses no threat behind the wheel then he should be fine regardless of age. Sometimes people well up until they're very old age still drive as long as they remain safe drivers. However, if there are any conditions that could hinder safe handling of a vehicle, that should be seriously considered. One condition would definitely be mental decline as well as blindness. These are two very serious conditions among others where a person should not be behind the wheel. I don't know the conditions of either of your parents, but again, sometimes all you could do is step back and watch when all else has failed. Sometimes this is all you can do until the right help along and intervenes
The good news is that there are steps you can take. The business of unsafe driving is the most pressing as the consequences of an error can be dire. You can research online the policies for drivers' licenses in their state. More and more states are responding to this dilemma with a process to report an unsafe driver without identifying the reporter. The state sends the elder a letter simply requiring them to report to the Dept. of Motor Vehicles for a standard driving test. The letter states the testing is mandatory with suspension of license for failure to appear.
No doubt there will be grumbling or worse, but you can play dumb and sympathize with what an inconvenience it is. A driving test will either clear him as safe or confirm your fears with a subsequent revocation of his license.
As to keeping an eye out, the others who have responded have great ideas. All you can do is alert the local "boots on the ground" about your fears and provide your contact information. Neighbors, clergy, physicians and the Dept. of Social Services can receive this heads up.
Families facing obstinacy in an elder often can only wait for a difficult event to break through the determination to remain independent. It may take a broken hip, a loss of a driver’s license, a disconnection of the electricity for an unpaid invoice to crack open a door to accepting help. Waiting is the hardest thing to do, but laws to protect the individual's right to make their own bad choices are tight.
Do what you can and pray for it not to take too great a fiasco to get through to them. Good luck and God bless!
And, uwantcr66, yes, trick them!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Tell her she has an appointment at Yale tomorrow...and tomorrow...and tomorrow. Trickery was the only way I got my mom into AL! That was only 18 months ago and today she is so far gone that she is afraid to leave the AL building.
As my therapist said, you don't need to what is right int his situation, you need to do what works.
Perhaps the best you can do is to help put in place systems that will protect them to the extent possible.
For the car breakdowns, such as flat tires, etc., get AAA or some other road service. To stop them from driving, first locate alternate transportation services before you can any action that would leave them stranded at home.
Upgrade their house to prevent falls, install exterior motion lights, security sensors, a lock box outside for emergency personnel, alert the local fire and police departments, ask if periodic wellness checks can be made, arrange for meals on wheels, etc.
Honestly, even if they lived next door to you, with all the precautions available, there still could be that one moment when something happens that changes everything.
I've spent hours agonizing over how to protect my father and am still battling with the concept that there's a limited amount I can do. You could even get in-facility care in assisted or independent living and one moment of inattentiveness could cause a fall that could change their lives.
The difficulty in caring is acknowledging and accepting (easier said than done) that these are high risk situations and there's a limited amount we can do to protect our loved ones.
I'm not saying give up or just accept their situation - but rather do as much as you can think of to protect them, recognizing their independence and refusal to accept change to a safer living environment.
I hope that your family will find the support needed that will allow your parents to remain at home and for you to have peace of mind. There are a lot of resources (like my small business) in America, even in remote desert areas.
Then, I would try to stay with them for 24 hrs, to see just how bad things are in the house. Are they really caring for themselves.
Why such a high insurance premium? I've never heard of someone paying those high prices.
good idea to reach out to them and begin to form a connection with them. Could be valuable help later as your parents age. ALso, I phoned my Dad every single day (except for when I was there visiting with him) for 4 years after Mom died. Maintaining that connection, even long distance, over time, will ease yours and their mind and could build trust between you. RE: the driving. Maybe Dad's Doctor could be the one to finally tell him he is unfit (if he is). Reaching out to your parents' doctors is a good thing to do anyway, so you know each other if/when the time comes they are not as fit as they are now. Hope this is some help to you. Good luck.