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DiscussionMeeting schedules: Any tips and tricks to be on time?
Caregivers | Last Active: 13 hours ago | Replies (6)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@minniem and @bobcmcc, I expanded the title of this discussion and am bringing it back to..."
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@colleenyoung
Thank you for bringing this topic back! It is such a stressful one for us at times! Dad is 94, with mobility, sight, hearing, etc obstacles, so getting ready to go to an appointment is challenging. I tell him the night before of the appointment and time. I try to make the appointments at a time of day that works with his routine and doesn’t require getting up earlier than usual, interfere with usual bathroom times, etc. Then I give him the one hour, then thirty minute, then fifteen minute warnings. But almost EVERY time I say, “time to go”, it is THEN he gets up to go to the bathroom, collect items he wants to have along for the trip, etc. All of which takes at least another twenty to thirty minutes. This, even when I give the thirty minute warning and reminder “so if you have to go to the bathroom, might want to do it now”. And if I remind him that we really HAVE to leave to make the appointment, he gets very annoyed and has the attitude that the doctor can just wait, because it is crucial that his hair is combed again or that he has his breath mints, etc….I have discovered that he really cannot gauge the passing of time and is surprised when an hour has passed. So, I switched to also telling him the actual TIME we have to leave. Worked for a while, but his vision has gotten worse and I don’t think he can see the clock clearly (plus I don’t think he grasps just how long it is going to take him to do the things he wants to do before leaving). I’ve tried bumping everything up thirty to forty-five minutes to have that time buffer, and it sometimes helps, then if we truly end up having extra time I just take the long way to the destination or stop for gas, etc. Has anybody used an audible timer, reminder for their care recipient? Too annoying, or demeaning? (I have been accepting more virtual appointments when offered unless it is with a doc that I think really needs to see him in person—much easier and less stressful.). I am really not a person that likes to nag, but this (and now hydration as well), is one where it seems unavoidable.