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Liz Pulliam Weston

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3 steps to help parents grow old gracefully

Don't treat your aging parents like kids. If you need to become involved in their affairs, start slowly and make them part of the decision process.

By Liz Pulliam Weston

Watching your parents age isn't easy. Trying to help them can be even tougher.

Your parents may be having trouble doing the things they used to handle effortlessly -- paying bills, driving, even taking care of their own health. But that doesn't mean they're willing to acknowledge the problem or listen to your advice. You may be similarly reluctant to raise these touchy issues and risk being shot down.

Failing to act, though, can have serious consequences. Financial problems could deplete your parents' savings and trash their credit. Health problems can snowball. And the devastation wrought in June of 2003, when an 86-year-old driver killed 10 people at a crowded California farmers market, made clear how dangerous declining driving skills can be.

You don't have to stand by helplessly while your parents endanger themselves or others. Elder care experts say there are many ways to broach these difficult subjects, and the sooner your discussion starts, the better.

It can help to understand the psychology involved.

  • It's about independence and control. The older generation puts a premium on self-reliance and deeply fears losing control -- fears that were imbedded during the chaos of the Great Depression and World War II, said Marty Richards, a Seattle geriatric care manager with three decades of experience.

  • You'll always be their child. Your parents may have trouble seeing you as an adult who can offer meaningful help or solutions. As elder law attorney Geraldine Champion put it, they remember changing your diapers -- what could you possibly know?

  • Authority figures matter. What they do tend to respect, geriatric experts say, is authority. The word of a doctor or other professional usually carries considerable clout. So you may need to enlist the help of your parents' physician, accountant, attorney or financial advisor to help make your points.

Once you understand where they're coming from, you can better decide how to start the discussion.

Conversations about these delicate issues work best, Champion said, if you focus on preserving your parents' dignity, quality of life and ability to make decisions, rather than on what may need to be taken away.

You can try the following three-step approach:

Start with a softball

One of the easiest ways to tackle of all these difficult subjects could be discussing what kinds of treatment your parents want if they become incapacitated.

It may seem grim to talk about whether they would want to be maintained on a life support system and under what conditions they would want you to “pull the plug.” But this is actually a chance to focus on how they want to live their lives, not what you want them to do.

“You can say, 'We wouldn't want to be in a position where we didn't know what your desires were,' ” said estate planning expert Michael McCarthy, a managing director of Deutsche Bank Private Banking.

You can get the conversation started with a free brochure called “Your Way,” provided by H.E.L.P., a Torrance, Calif.-based nonprofit for seniors. This guide talks about the different medical decisions that might need to be made and how seniors can stay in charge of their care by making these decisions in advance.

Ideally, your parents would spell out their wishes in a health-care directive. They should also have a health-care power of attorney designating you or some other trusted person to make medical decisions for them if they're incapacitated.

Even if they're unwilling to take those steps, just raising the subject can help you know what they want and open the door for further discussion.

If your concern is their current health, you can talk about that next. Your local area agency on aging, listed in the phone book or through the Eldercare Locator at U.S. Administration on Aging, can help you find resources if your parents need care.

Follow up with finances

Once the topic of incapacity has been broached, it's easier to segue into a talk about how their bills would get paid if they were in the hospital or a nursing home, said McCarthy, an attorney who specializes in estates and trusts. Some possibilities:

  • Another power of attorney -- this one for finances -- could allow someone else to take over money management. Sometimes banks balk at accepting these, so you may need a lawyer's help in drafting the document and in convincing financial institutions to accept it.

  • If your parents have a living trust, you could be named as successor trustee, allowing you to step in as financial manager if needed. Again, it's usually best to get a lawyer's input so the trust is properly created.

  • Alternately, you could be given check-writing authority on their bank accounts. Or more simply, you can sign them up for online bill payment, which allows you to sign in as them to pay bills if that becomes necessary. This is a less formal situation that works best when your parents trust you and are willing to give up some of their financial privacy.

(That's no small sacrifice, by the way. The older generation may be even more private about their money than they are about sex.)

If your parent is already having trouble keeping up with the bills, you can offer ways to ease the burden, McCarthy said. You can help set up automatic payments, so that the mortgage, utilities and other bills are paid directly from your parents' checking account without their having to remember to write checks. (Make sure the checking account has overdraft protection, in case they forget to keep enough money in the account.) Online access to their bank accounts and credit cards, if they assent, also can help you monitor their finances.

Again, the key is to emphasize how you can help make their life easier while avoiding the embarrassment and expense of late payments.

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