Several years ago, I had a friend that worked for the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services in adult protective services. My background was in child protective services. He on the other hand chose a career path working with older adults. When our paths connected again, he told me he had to retire because the work was killing him.
Reportedly he should have had a caseload of 40 people, but instead it was 148 older adults. He said, "There was no way anyone could adequately cover that caseload." His last assigned case was one he chose to remember. Because of the nature of the report, he could have taken up to seven days to make contact.
He opted to do it immediately because there was only a twenty-four hour window that the nursing home would keep the man's space reserved in the nursing home. If he didn't return in that window of time, he'd be forever out of the place. So, what were the allegations?
Because of advanced Parkinson's disease and the inability to live without assistance, the man had been placed in nursing home care. Yet, his wife who has Alzheimer's had come to visit and he convinced her to check him out of the nursing home and take him home. The referral to adult protective services had been made because the social worker at the nursing home knew it was a catastrophe in the making.
So when my friend went to the home to investigate conditions, he asked the wife about her plan to provide support in caring for her husband. She said: "I've got people I can call." He asked for names, and she didn't have any. She did verbally agree that she wasn't able to provide for her husband's needs, but that she'd find help when the time came.
He asked again about her plan for doing so and she didn't have a plan. In exasperation she said: "I can always call our son." My friend responded: "That's great. Let's call him now". When he called the son, the son was astounded. He screamed into the phone: "She did what? My mother isn't able to take care of my dad."
My friend then went to the back bedroom to talk to the husband with Parkinson's. When asked if he thought his wife was physically capable of providing for his needs, he said "Yes". My friend asked: "Do you remember your wedding vows? What did you promise your wife you'd do?" He said: "She promised to love, cherish and obey me." "So, what did you promise her", was my friend's reply. The husband responded: "To love and to cherish".
That led to: "So if you really love your wife, you'd understand that she doesn't have the capacity to physically take care of you. In the process of trying, it will become too difficult for her. The stress associated with her need to take care of you when she's not able, will eventually kill her. Is that what you want to happen?".
The man replied: "My room at the nursing home is too small." My friend replied, "My question about your wedding vows has to do with what you promised to do for your wife. It isn't about you. If you really love and cherish your wife, you'd know this is too difficult for her to do and she will die trying. Are you willing and ready to go back to the nursing home?" The man responded: "I guess so, but I don't like it."
My friend followed in his car as the couple made their way back to the nursing home. Once inside, the social worker at the nursing home asked my friend: "How did you manage to do this?" He replied: "I asked about their wedding vows. The husband knew I was right. It simply took a reminder for him to opt to do the right thing."
All My Best!
Don
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