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What to do if an elderly parent refuses assistance

What can you do if your parent's health is deteriorating yet they refuse assistance? When an elderly person is attempting to maintain their house while living alone, it is very worrying.

Learn how to convince parent to accept help

What can you do if your parent's health is deteriorating yet they refuse assistance? When an elderly person is attempting to maintain their house while living alone, it is very worrying. Surprisingly often, this circumstance occurs. It is upsetting and worrying for families.

Nearly 80% of adult children who were providing care for a parent (or parents) characterized their loved ones as "stubborn." Family carers have difficulties with issues like dangerous driving and yearly physicals.

What to do when an elderly parent's home becomes unsafe for them to remain in, especially alone, is an issue that frequently sparks debate. For instance, they could have mobility challenges that an older home can't handle.

Moving to an assisted living facility can improve nutrition and lessen loneliness, lowering the chance of a debilitating fall. However, unless there is a catastrophe, some senior citizens would not even contemplate it.

Whatever the difficulty, it may cause conflict amongst relatives. There are actions you can take to improve communication if you and your family are having trouble agreeing on what to do next.

Three Pointers for Productive Senior Care Communication:

Open-ended inquiries are preferable: You must identify the cause of your loved one's hesitancy before you can take action. They must be reluctant to sell their home because they brought up their family there, right? Or perhaps they hate having to part with certain possessions. Sometimes, even if an elderly person doesn't feel safe in their home, they may still hesitate to make a change due to emotional attachment.

Ask open-ended inquiries that enable the older to describe their thoughts and anxieties rather than do most of the talking. Allow them to speak without interjecting or attempting to dictate how they should feel. Be patient. It's critical to comprehend what is behind the obstacles they are erecting.

Kindness and empathy are important: Accepting aid or relocating might be emotionally damaging for a proud senior who has always been independent. Recognize how difficult these adjustments are. Usually, kindness and empathy are more effective than annoyance or coercive measures.

It would be useful to clarify that elder care options like assisted living or in-home care genuinely preserve freedom. By accepting some assistance, older adults can prolong their independence.

Change the process: It's important to understand that change is a gradual process, especially when it comes to seniors. Unless there is an immediate danger, it's best to accept that it will take time and multiple conversations to make significant changes. Rushing the process is not advisable.

Meet in the middle, even if you might believe they should immediately go to a condo or assisted living facility. As they start taking virtual tours of neighboring assisted living facilities, they may agree to a few hours of daily in-home care.

Find out more about Heritage Care Home Senior Living

Change may be challenging, and we recognize this at Heritage Care Home communities. Our skilled team members are adept at calming a senior and assisting them in seeing the advantages of transferring. To discover more, contact us right away!

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