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Another approach might be to suggest hiring a caregiver to manage some household chores and NOT actual ""hands-on care"" or personal assistance. Often times this is seen as less threatening to a loved one's independence and will serve as a means to ""get the caregiver in the door"". Place the emphasis on getting help handling the heavy housework such as vacuuming, bed linen changes, and possibly even yard work due to some declining physical limitations. Or suggest help with food shopping, travel to Dr appointments, and other errands when driving is no longer an option. In this manner, you might have your parents accept help they would not have otherwise been agreeable to. Your hope is that they will see the value in having assistance and develop a trusting relationship with their caregiver. The expectant outcome is that they will become more open to the idea of allowing he/she to provide other types of assistance such as personal care when needed.
When your parent or loved one is living alone or with you, focus the attention on YOU as the caregiver needing the help and NOT your loved one's need for assistance. Emphasize that you would be the one to benefit from such help as many parents place concern for their children' welfare before their own. Suggest that bringing in a housekeeper for instance, would alleviate your worry about managing daily household chores such as cleaning, shopping, meals, and laundry. Or should a nurse aide come in to assist your loved one with bathing and personal care, you would have more time to manage other household responsibilities. As a working caregiver, suggest that by having a companion/assistant stay with your loved one, it would relieve you of worries and concerns while away. Remember to downplay them as the cause for getting help, but instead stress that YOU, the caregiver, are the reason that assistance needed.
Another idea might be to seek the help and advice of a trusted professional who is someone your parents hold in high regard. They might surprise you by their willingness to accept the advice of a long time family physician, a former or current home health nurse, or a family friend in the medical field, prior to your own input. Employ their trusted status as a means to relay your concerns and advise your parents in the right direction.
In many families, your conflicting role as the child and caregiver thwarts your well-meaning attempts at helping your parents. The basis for your actions should not be confused by misguided guilt. Therefore do not take their rebuttals personally or offensively, but rather focus on a necessary means to an end. This article is contributed by Clare Absher RN,BSN. Clare has a website dedicated to caregiving. Please take a look at: www.carepathways.com
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