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Elderly parents

Lasting Power of Attorney

29 replies

Fantapops · 23/03/2024 20:14

My grandmother has mild dementia (I'm using this to score her when I see her, currently she's at a 15: https://www.alz.org/careplanning/downloads/dsrs-scale.pdf ). Official diagnosis is Mixed Dementia of Vascular Dementia & Alzheimers.

Her support worker has told her that she must update her will and do a lasting power of attorney ASAP. I was there during this appointment (I normally live hundreds of miles away). After conversations with my grandmother it seems she wants my mother & I to be joint LPA.

I relayed this to my mother who said that she has already almost finished my grandmother's LPA with her as the sole LPA - she just needs witnesses. I am really, really concerned about this. My mother is a recovering addict and abused me as a child. She has made some ridiculous legal & financial decisions of her own and quite frankly, I don't trust her as far as I can throw her. I have told my grandmother this who is worried (and doesn't remember doing the LPA with my mum), and doesn't want this, but is scared to speak up to my mum who can really steamroll ahead and is pretty manipulative.

My gran has also voiced that she wants to move to my town and have me as her main support as she progresses. However she's thinking of staying put with no family support because she's worried she'll come between my mother & I if she decides to say she wants my support.

I literally don't know what to do?? My mum asked my gran for money to buy a house after she sold her own prematurely and made some bad financial decisions. My gran said no. I'm worried of the impact an LPA with my mum only could have on my gran. I have told my mum that my gran has asked for both of us but my mum is pushing back hard and has said she will finish the LPA with my gran in April. I won't be there and literally won't be able to stop it. Do I just have to watch this absolute train wreck take place??

https://www.alz.org/careplanning/downloads/dsrs-scale.pdf

OP posts:
colouredball · 26/03/2024 10:23

What happens then when her dementia progresses and she has no capacity? Who would be making the decisions on her care etc?

When it happened to my nanna we found that POA was hopeless anyway as everything depended on social services assessment. So whatever they deemed her care needs to be was the care provided.

Mum5net · 26/03/2024 10:32

Fantapops · 26/03/2024 10:19

What happens then when her dementia progresses and she has no capacity? Who would be making the decisions on her care etc?

At 83, my DM with severe dementia had to be sectioned. There was no power of attorney. Everyone around stepped up. The Social Workers while knowing we didn't have POA still listened very closely to our wishes for our DM's care and medical issues and actioned everyone of them. DM was not compromised in anyway at all. The most difficult thing was not being able to act for her financially. Had she given us access to her bank account before she lost capacity by making one of us a signatory then that would have been a whole lot easier. That's why the suggestion of not having POA makes sense in your exceptional circumstance.

TammyJones · 26/03/2024 17:36

Fantapops · 26/03/2024 10:19

What happens then when her dementia progresses and she has no capacity? Who would be making the decisions on her care etc?

Do you know there are 2 types of POA
one health
one Financial
???

TammyJones · 26/03/2024 17:54

Mum5net · 26/03/2024 10:32

At 83, my DM with severe dementia had to be sectioned. There was no power of attorney. Everyone around stepped up. The Social Workers while knowing we didn't have POA still listened very closely to our wishes for our DM's care and medical issues and actioned everyone of them. DM was not compromised in anyway at all. The most difficult thing was not being able to act for her financially. Had she given us access to her bank account before she lost capacity by making one of us a signatory then that would have been a whole lot easier. That's why the suggestion of not having POA makes sense in your exceptional circumstance.

That’s very good advice.
get that done today op

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