Recommendation for geriatric couples counselor therapist near New Haven
October 1, 2018 6:59 AM   Subscribe

Pretty much what it says, but a few relevant details inside. I understand that it may not be my place to recommend this to my parents, but would like to have this handy just in case. Also, I know one or both of my parents should ask their physician(s) about this.

I'm not even sure if couples / marriage counseling is the most relevant but the geriatric part definitely is. Nothing special here, but I would like a recommendation from a Mefite rather than just Googling someone at Yale.

Parents are getting old. They've been married over 50 years. Sometimes happily--sometimes not. Their health is deteriorating. My mom's long term health problems mean that she is becoming more and more reliant on my dad and much faster than either of them expected. He's doing a pretty good job but it is getting to him. They are struggling with dependence independence, being honest about their actual health with me and my sibling and with each other. Sometimes there is resentment that comes out in bad ways. All of this stuff is pretty much entirely normal. Right? Getting old sucks and care giving can be hard.

I live far away and see them about once a year. When I was back recently it was really good. They seemed pretty good too, but a bit on their best behavior. My sib who is closer so their visit is less of an "event" maybe sees the rough edges a bit more. They commented on the phone that they "just need help figuring out how to cope with this stuff and maybe help remembering to be good to each other sometimes".

So, a therapist, counselor, or geriatric specialist who covers that stuff not the physiological seems in order. They have all of the regular dermatology, cardio, oncology, rheumatology stuff well covered. No Alzheimer's or dementia. Just the usual memory issue that older people often have. They've been evaluated and have good regular medical care consistently. One doctor has suggested the Dorothy Adler Geriatric Assessment Center at Yale, especially regarding sleep, but they haven't gone yet. Going to keep bringing that one up once in a while when appropriate.

Know anybody really good? Thank you. New Haven, Middletown, Clinton area.

PS: I really do know that this is their issue and I hesitate to get involved at all, so no need to come tell me to butt out. But if there is an opening )and there may be, dad recently opened up just a tiny tiny bit about how hard it all is) I would like to have the info at the ready.
posted by anonymous to Health & Fitness (4 answers total) 2 users marked this as a favorite
 
Just dropping a note to say that I should have a name for you in a couple of days.
posted by 8603 at 7:35 AM on October 1, 2018


My relative used to work for Masonicare in the office dedicated to helping seniors figure out what they need (whether that's in-home, inpatient, etc.) and how/where to get it. I'd bet they have good referrals for you, and a consultation might help figure out the other stuff too.
posted by Dashy at 7:52 AM on October 1, 2018


My experience with that generation is that after 50 years of marriage, they are very unlikely to want to see a couples counselor and start talking publicly about all that private stuff. I think you would have better luck with social worker type who can come in with a focus on how to make all of this easier (and help reframe behavior and do other counseling type stuff while they are there)
posted by metahawk at 9:47 AM on October 1, 2018 [2 favorites]


Fyi, the Adler Center waitlist can be very, very long so if they want to be seen they may want to get an appointment now for...whenever. This is especially true if they are going to need neurocog assessments going forward.
posted by cobaltnine at 1:19 PM on October 1, 2018


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