Convincing Your Aging Parents to Accept Help
No matter what you’ve accomplished in life, one of the most challenging tasks you may face is persuading a beloved parent or relative to accept help, especially if they’ve always been proud, private, or independent. Here are some tips to make your case when you see that your parents need assistance with housekeeping, cooking, self-care, or other tasks.
Talk it over with your siblings and other family members first
Before you bring up hiring help with Mom or Dad, touch base with your siblings (if any) and other family members who are invested in their wellbeing. You may find there are differences of opinion that you all need to sort out first before you talk to your parents. If the family agrees on the type of help your parents need, that’s a strong argument in favor of your point of view. If some of you want different types of help, that gives your parents more than one option to consider.
Get your parent’s trusted advisors on board
Let’s face it; you’ll always be your parents’ child. No matter how much they respect your opinion your parents most likely don’t view you as a peer. That’s why many eldercare experts recommend recruiting your parents’ doctor, close friends, or clergy to talk with them about help. Their opinions may carry enough weight to convince your parents to give it a try.
Be patient and keep the conversation going—respectfully
When you see your parents having difficulty with things they used to handle with ease, you may think the need for help is obvious. But we all adjust to changes over time, often without realizing it. Or we may know we need help and hope no one else notices. Either way, consider your parents’ self-image and feelings whenever you bring up the need for care. Remember, too, that the final say is up to them.
Because the decision is theirs, listen to what they have to say on the subject. There may be specific things they’re concerned about. The cost of help, the potential awkwardness of having an unfamiliar person in the home, and the fear of losing autonomy are common worries among older adults. You may be able to find ways to work around these concerns, but first you have to find out what they are.
Take help one small step at a time
Shepell FGI, a Canadian family assistance program provider, recommends getting reluctant parents on board by starting with one small, relatively inexpensive service. In today’s economy, you’ve got a nearly endless list of options, including grocery delivery, housecleaning, laundry and ironing, in-home tech support visits, errand driving, in-home meal preparation, and yard maintenance. You might convince parents with pets to try a dog walking service or mobile pet grooming. A parent with a pool may be ready to outsource cleaning and maintenance to the pros.
A positive experience with a small service can set the stage for your folks to accept other help more readily as it’s needed. It can also serve as a trial run to show your parents what’s involved in screening, hiring, and managing help in the home, so they’ll feel more experienced and capable when it’s time to make the next help decision.
3 Comments
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I really like your tip about considering tour parents’ self-image and feelings when discussing the need for home care. My parents have taught me to value pride and self-reliance ever since I was little, so I could see how they can be hard to persuade about hiring in-home caregivers. This really informative piece will surely help us out when the time comes that the both of them will need professional care in the safety of their property.
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I don’t see any advice about the issues we are dealing with regarding my parents accepting help. How would you deal with these issues?
1. Very very poor hygiene. Bedroom and bedding accidents and the inability to deal with soiled diapers and bedding. Also, the attempted coverup of this problem, where it is obvious by the odor to anyone coming into the house.
2. The inability to understand and administer meds correctly. Should you consider this issue dangerous to my parents’ wellbeing?
3. Driving. Would you consider them a danger to themselves and others due to their failing eyesight and confusion resulting in them getting lost?
And yet they will accept no help, from anyone. To quote your article “the first al say is up to them”. Really?