Hi all, I hope everyone is ticking along. Sorry It's been a couple of weeks since I was last here.
I was wondering if anyone had any experience of someone having a temporary loss of capacity? Thinking about it there must be several examples of where this might be the case, such as a reaction to a medication, a urine infection, a stroke etc, where you may not necessarily know if the person is going to regain their capacity or not. Can you become a deputy through the Office of the Public Guardian but then revert to a POA if the person recovers enough?
My last updates were that Dad was starting to settle in the nursing home but his knee was beginning to give way more. Unfortunately it caused him to have another fall and to cut a long story short, he's broken his back. They are trying to get a brace fitted so they can x-ray him to determine the next steps. Meanwhile he's been laid flat for over a week, barely eating or drinking, losing condition, in a fair bit of pain and also obviously in an unfamiliar environment (especially being blind and fairly deaf.) He was fine the first 36 hours but then went downhill rapidly with acute delirium. It's been so bad at times that he has missed medications and they had to get security guards to hold him down to prevent him getting off the bed. They're trying to control what they can in terms of what might be causing it but they've said it will fluctuate and it could be weeks or months before he recovers from this part (the back is another story!), but even then it may not be absolutely back to where he was.
While dealing with this, I've also been dealing with the family who own the other half of his house and despite knowing he has broken his back they are pressuring us to sell. Unfortunately I only have general Power of Attorney as so much else was going on that we hadn't had the full POA certificated. Now we can't do that and we don't know when we can, if ever. I called the Carer's Helpline and they said I could become a deputy as they can act on the knowledge of how the person is now but I don't know if this changes anything with regards to the general POA, or if the full POA is better and we can move to that at some point in the future. The vulture family are going to go mad if I suggest waiting for a while and I don't know how long would legally be considered reasonable.
Every time I think it's safe to go back in the water, another shark comes up and say "just one more thing...
I was wondering if anyone had any experience of someone having a temporary loss of capacity? Thinking about it there must be several examples of where this might be the case, such as a reaction to a medication, a urine infection, a stroke etc, where you may not necessarily know if the person is going to regain their capacity or not. Can you become a deputy through the Office of the Public Guardian but then revert to a POA if the person recovers enough?
My last updates were that Dad was starting to settle in the nursing home but his knee was beginning to give way more. Unfortunately it caused him to have another fall and to cut a long story short, he's broken his back. They are trying to get a brace fitted so they can x-ray him to determine the next steps. Meanwhile he's been laid flat for over a week, barely eating or drinking, losing condition, in a fair bit of pain and also obviously in an unfamiliar environment (especially being blind and fairly deaf.) He was fine the first 36 hours but then went downhill rapidly with acute delirium. It's been so bad at times that he has missed medications and they had to get security guards to hold him down to prevent him getting off the bed. They're trying to control what they can in terms of what might be causing it but they've said it will fluctuate and it could be weeks or months before he recovers from this part (the back is another story!), but even then it may not be absolutely back to where he was.
While dealing with this, I've also been dealing with the family who own the other half of his house and despite knowing he has broken his back they are pressuring us to sell. Unfortunately I only have general Power of Attorney as so much else was going on that we hadn't had the full POA certificated. Now we can't do that and we don't know when we can, if ever. I called the Carer's Helpline and they said I could become a deputy as they can act on the knowledge of how the person is now but I don't know if this changes anything with regards to the general POA, or if the full POA is better and we can move to that at some point in the future. The vulture family are going to go mad if I suggest waiting for a while and I don't know how long would legally be considered reasonable.
Every time I think it's safe to go back in the water, another shark comes up and say "just one more thing...