Husband With Slow Cognitive Decline: So sad & confused
About 11 years ago at age 55, my husband became very ill with a high fever, was admitted to hospital but not treated with any ABX (until too late), so became delirious. He had developed severe pneumonia in both lobes. When he was discharged he was a different person, with pretty profound short term memory loss. I blame the hospital for their negligence which allowed the delirium to develop. Eventually, after seeing every kind of dr under the son, he was diagnosed with MCI. We are now retired (he was a computer engineer) and I’m struggling with my fears about the future. He drives safely (uses the GPS almost always), takes care of his own personal hygiene, does yard work when he needs to, helps around the house, and helps with our two grandsons on the two babysitting days. He does many “normal” things, he just can’t remember anything - which is very NOT normal. There are other cognitive issues too. I don’t want to keep going on and on because there’s just so much to talk about, but I’m wondering if anyone else is in a similar normal/not normal at all type situation. I feel like I’m always waiting for some awful event that will propel him into something more advanced like dementia. I’m also reluctant to get him into another round of neuropsych testing. The first round about 3.5 yrs ago wasn’t particularly helpful but could it be now if things have changed? How?Also, 3.5 yrs ago his MRI showed no sign of Alzheimer’s. In a fairly recent discussion with a neurologist, he suggested maybe/probably vascular. I do take care of all appts and bill paying but then again I pretty much always have. I just don’t know what to do next. I don’t sleep well and am depressed and sad that my life has become this all encompassing thing, and I’m disappearing. Sorry for the novel, just so sad and confused.
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@centre - thank you so, so much. This advice is immeasurable, yet actionable 🙂 I know that I have to start making the tough decisions now, so that we will be prepared (as much as possible) for later.
@IndianaScott - your words and advice are so helpful. I am learning so much from you and others and as frightening as it is, knowing that you all are out here makes a difference.
With gratitude...
@2me - thanks for responding. I think it helps to just know we aren't alone...though very lonely in our worlds.
Excellent advise. Better to be proactive than reactivate.
You’re very welcome, we are all here for you and happy to listen to any rant, complaint, or question😊
Some other ideas- anything you can do to provide structure will help. I bought a larger-size calendar and wrote in whatever in the boxes, used highlighters to mark MD visits (yellow), tradespeople coming (green), my schedule (blue),etc. I bought a calendar clock on Amazon that has the day of the week, the date, the time, the part of the day (morning, afternoon, evening). When my husband would ask a schedule question, I wouldn’t answer the question, but instead direct him cheerfully to the calendar. It didn’t take long for him to see the calendar as an important resource that he could regularly check on his own, a bit of dignity and independence. If something was important, “be home for the plumber”, I would tape a stickie over the doorknob he would have to use to leave and also stick one on the fridge door handle at eye level.
Possibly what to expect- my husband lost the ability to use a cell phone, so I bought a picture landline phone from Amazon that has little clear pockets you put the photos or written names of people he would call (you, family, etc), you program the phone so he just presses the photo or name and it dials automatically.
Another idea- I started buying Healthy Choice Cafe Steamers frozen meals when I would be working and when putting together a sandwich himself got too much (I noticed he started eating easy stuff- crackers, cereal, chips). I would tape index cards on the boxes with the cooking time written with a Sharpie. That worked for a long time.
See what you can do to make YOUR life less stressful- I hired a house cleaner who is willing to also do laundry, remake beds, etc. I used Next Door to find a handyman for small household repairs (my husband always did these and still wanted to, but just couldn’t). I primarily shop for groceries online and use the curbside pick-up. I have a Walmart + account, you order online and they deliver for free, it’s $98/year. I switched prescriptions to Rite-Aid, they do free delivery. My husband is home during the day and is fine with receiving deliveries, all this saves me actually having to go in the stores and shop- a big time-saver.
His driving might be of concern, even though he uses a GPS. I encourage you to put some sort of tracking device on his person. We use a Smart Care Watch which enables me to track him and also enables us to call each other. If he ever should get lost, call police right away. Don’t wait 2 hours like I did. He had gotten on the interstate and almost to the state line! That was before we got the watch. He never drove again after that day.
Thank you for all of your helpful suggestions. I bought the Alzheimer’s clock today showing the day and date and the large calendars for his doctor or test dates and use a yellow highlighter. Next will be ordering groceries online and pick up or have delivered. A housekeeper for the kitchen and bathroom sounds great. I need the time to take care of myself and spend time with my husband going to senior activities and enjoying ourselves. I am trying to think differently when I am feeling annoyed at him. I say to myself “he is sick and he is doing the best he can” and trying not to correct him (just suggest) and not argue because of the tension these remarks create. Thank you again for your advice!
I discovered, as you did that we had fallen behind on a bill pay, it wasn't his fault, it was the health care that we were using, but it opened my eyes to many other areas. I finally had to take him off face book, google e-mail and Amazon and find a way to get that stopped, "snail mail" did more for us than anything on the internet. First we paid bills together on line, then I had to take over and pay by check, i tell him and remind him. He forgot so much, He lost his passwords and his computer was too important to just let all this pass by. I could not take it from him, so i chose what he could use. But, at first had to stay in room when he was on computer to protect us.
Sometimes i do have to yell at him. He will act like he hears and understands what i am saying but i find out, later either he didn't hear, understand or remember but at the time agrees with me. Some days better than others, and i know it will not go away. So thank you Mayo and caretakers for sharing.
I honestly wish they could invent an implantable device ( GPS ) when people get to this point to help track them. So many people take these “ jewelry GPS” off. So many lives could be saved!