This is probably a topic which has been done to death itself elsewhere on this forum. It was an item on Woman's Hour this morning that set me thinking whilst I was pulling on me kecks and boots.
A poor woman had been struggling to look after her 88 year old mother who was suffering from dementia, with the assistance of carers who came round for short periods. The poor daughter was obviously devoting most of her time to this gruesome task, dealing with incoherence, rapid mood swings, and of course, frequent double incontinence. The mother had just about every day said "I want to die". The interviewer asked the daughter "Would you ever think of putting your mother in a home?" "Oh, never!" came the reply, "if I did that she would surely die. I care for her out of love".
I have to say that I began to lose sympathy for the daughter's terrible plight, she having shackled herself to a living hell. I felt that if her aged mother were put into a home and rapidly died - even through the negligence of relatively unsympathetic carers - this would have been a better situation all round. The daughter had developed a morbid attachment to her mother (IMO), and had no other close relationships in her life, and devoted herself to prolonging a situation which was doing nothing for her mother except prolong her agonies, and nothing for herself except give herself the feeling that she was being righteous and saving her mother from greater pain if she were left to the authorities. Better a short spell of agony and a quick death for someone that age, than these obsessive attachments whose virtues are somewhat dubious, IMO.
Having said that, it's not a situation I'd like to be forced into making a choice about.