Rose65
Well-known Member
- Location
- United Kingdom
Elderly friend of mine confided that she is very worried about her neighbour whom she's known a long time. Only now she's often wandering around in the street, confused and distressed. She's invited her in and realised she is showing signs of dementia. She wonders what to do for her, perhaps take her to the doctor's.
Well, I asked for more information and it turns out this woman has two children who just don't visit her.
I've advised my friend not to get too involved but to alert the family. It is up to them, not the neighbours, to handle this surely?
I may seem hard but I have experience. A while back a woman I was friendly with became similar, only she kept falling down and needing to be taken to hospital. Guess who got landed with it! I alerted her family but for whatever reasons they were estranged and just let me take the brunt. Other neighbours would bring her to me. I eventually put my foot down and became unavailable, after many hours waiting at hospital with her. She was just not really my problem and my life had become utterly disrupted. Her family never did step up and now she's in a nursing home.
Have you ever found yourself in such a dilemma, retired yourself and feeling obliged to help people whose families just refuse? I mean even if an elderly frail person is all alone, it is a matter for social services and doctors. Decisions need making that neighbours, even friends, just cannot make.
Well, I asked for more information and it turns out this woman has two children who just don't visit her.
I've advised my friend not to get too involved but to alert the family. It is up to them, not the neighbours, to handle this surely?
I may seem hard but I have experience. A while back a woman I was friendly with became similar, only she kept falling down and needing to be taken to hospital. Guess who got landed with it! I alerted her family but for whatever reasons they were estranged and just let me take the brunt. Other neighbours would bring her to me. I eventually put my foot down and became unavailable, after many hours waiting at hospital with her. She was just not really my problem and my life had become utterly disrupted. Her family never did step up and now she's in a nursing home.
Have you ever found yourself in such a dilemma, retired yourself and feeling obliged to help people whose families just refuse? I mean even if an elderly frail person is all alone, it is a matter for social services and doctors. Decisions need making that neighbours, even friends, just cannot make.