Follow
Share
Read More
Find Care & Housing
If you have POA for her then you do have some level of responsibility for her. You do not have to move her into your home, or find housing for her or become her caregiver.

You tell the hospital that you cannot and will not move her into your home and that she is an unsafe discharge and cannot live back at her place.

The part about not being able to afford a nursing home is nonsense though. If her income is low enough Medicaid pays for it. If she has assets like real estate and bank accounts, those things will have to be liquidated and spent down paying for her care before Medicaid starts picking up the tab.

DO NOT for any reason transport your SIL yourself. Social workers lie all the time. They want her out of the hospital. Once she is out their door she is no longer their responsibility. She is as long as she's under their roof. Once she's in your car, you're it as they say.

Tell this social worker that she will have to have her transported to the NH by ambulance because you're not able.
When the hospital wants her out bad enough they will find her a facility and get her there. Don't you do it.

You're wise not to sigh anything either. Never sign any document involving a nursing home that you have not read carefully or had a lawyer look over.
Helpful Answer (22)
Reply to BurntCaregiver
Report

Are you joint POAs? With dementia, your husband is clearly no longer capable of exercising that responsibility.

If YOU are POA, I'd report the theft to the police, regardless of what dementia sis wants. Having the theft documented by the police is a requirement for Medicaid to move past the penalty.

Do not transport a person with dementia ANYWHERE on your own, especially one as unpredictable as your sister.

"It is no longer safe for my sister to be cared for at home. She is a danger to herself (wandering) and others (documented attacks)".
Helpful Answer (17)
Reply to BarbBrooklyn
Report

No good deed goes unpunished it seems...You try to help and get involved in a sick family members life and this is what it comes to. Truly awful and truly awful you are not getting help from the so called "professionals".

Please, please stick to your guns. DO NOT go pick her up. APS is sending you an idle threat, if it ever (it won't) got to court, you would vigorously defend yourself and no reasonable judge will see that you are capable of taking on her care. The SW at the hospital was trying to stick you, if that happens again, the SW tells you to pick her up and bring her to a NH that has accepted her, you tell them to send her there by ambulance. As Bounce said, you might want to resign your POA, but regardless, if there is too much involved with that, just keep saying no and don't be frightened by threats from so called authorities who should be there to help you in situations like this.
Helpful Answer (13)
Reply to mstrbill
Report

"Being a POA is different than being a court-appointed legal guardian". 

Yes, agree.

'I was told to come get her".

The hospital may want to move this patient along & aim for family to supply transport if possible. For a few reasons.

1. Escorted transport (eg non-emergency ambulance) costs the hospital money.

2. The hospital may struggle to get the patient to agree to transfer out - unless the patient willingly leaves with family.
Currently the hospital has Duty of Care. If family collect, then Duty of Care transfers onto family.
What happens AFTER patient discharged to family won't concern the hospital. Patient won't get out of the car at the NH, absconds etc. Not their problem.

But family transport is not always practical or suitable eg
- unsafe behaviours of patient
- family health issues
- family have caregiving committments.
You have all that!

So if you can't - you can't.
Keep polite but firm.
Helpful Answer (13)
Reply to Beatty
Report
mstrbill Nov 21, 2023
Exactly
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter