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The Hospice service my Mom [98] had was outstanding. They kept me informed on any medicine changes and what they were doing to keep Mom comfortable.

With Mom's condition [head injury due to a fall], both my Dad and I were sad but relieved when she did pass. Would I wanted her to live another week or two being in a coma state? Why? For what purpose? Her quality of life was gone. She passed peacefully but waited until her favorite all time movie on TV had ended.
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I wish you all the best and hope you can have him near you for the holidays, I wish I would of took my mom home on hospice, Because the hospital hospice upped her morphine without telling me, to where I wouldn't be able to say our proper good bye, or talk about our love for her and I regret it. I Stayed at the hospital with her day in and day out sleep on a cot and behind my back they up the morphine. Why couldn't they ask me if there were any wishes or talking to her before, Since I was in charge of her and we decided to start her on 1 mg to 2 mg, morphine, but as soon a s I went down to cafe to get a coffee is when they upped it to 8, I So Wished I took Her Home.. Now I live with regrets, Hospice seems much better home then in a hospital setting from what I have read, I'm glad they are good people to you and your husband every patient needs that care of real caring people who want the best, and I wish you all the best. I will say a prayer for your family.
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I am so sorry for what you are going through. We are all bonded together as caregivers but, of course, our paths can be very different. Please know you will be in my prayers and I ask that God will continue to carry you with this heavy burden you have been dealt.
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Came across this by accident but feel compelled to write. I'm sitting here alone at 9:41 pm 12\18\2015 a week before Christmas, only I am not alone, in the back ground I hear my husbands weak breathing and I am afraid every night he will be gone when I wake up. Hospice has been a light in my life, they help me honor his wished by keeping him home to die. Yes a few weeks ago he talked to me, now he mumbles like a child and yells at me and most of all sleeps.I do not in any way think hospice has rushed his passing. When he cried out in pain they gave him morphine and haldol to calm him down. We are still on that regime and no one knows how long this is going to go on, they have not taken away any of his other medications. Maybe you are wondering what is wrong with him. I'll make it a short story, first a brain tumor, second spinal cord tumor that left him paralized , then both legs amputated from the knee down, then a infection in the bone from open wounds on his bottom. They wanted to cut his hip off but he opted for no more. So here we are with hospice. Not only do they help with him but are helping me through. I tell everyone don't put off spending time with your loved ones, no one knows if they even have a later. This was our time, children are grown this is our later, he is only 52
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Sadgirl, I am so sorry about your mom. It has been 6 weeks since I lost my dad, and I am still struggling with the loss.
In my case, dad was not yet on hospice when they administered the narcotics that I feel eventually hastened his death. Once given, his vitals crashed precipitously. However, I have to support what windytown and others have said: no one can say for certain how much longer they would have had without the medication. My dad's own oncologist gave me an outside range of a "few weeks" when I asked him, point blank. He was gone less than 15 hours later, and no one was more surprised than his medical team when they got their report the next morning. If you knew for sure that your mom's life would have lasted a few more weeks, but she would be in unbearable pain (which neither you, nor I nor anyone else can even imagine), would you want that for her? Or rather, would you want her to have a peaceful passing, surrounded by the best care she could get. Everyone has to think about this.
In my case, even though I feel I would have had my dad a bit longer and perhaps could have told him I loved him one more time, in the end, I knew that he knew that, and he was able to go peacefully. That is my last memory of him, and one I know he would be OK with, so as much as I miss him, I am at peace now these few weeks later knowing he did not have to suffer needlessly for my own conscious.
One point to underscore here, and I find I am evangelizing with each retelling of my dad's story: Make absolute sure that your family's wishes are codified in a Healthcare POA and discussed beforehand!! This, for me, made the hardest decision of my life one of the easiest to live with. Also, it goes without saying, please do not wait until the last minute to say you love your dear ones. You never know when their time will come. That would be a true regret.
I wish you and the other peace in your mind when this issue has come up.
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Sadgirl, my condolences on the passing of your mother.

Please don't feel guilty about what you could've done to gain time with your mom. A doctor's guess, is just that, a guess. Cancer and other horrible diseases have their own timeline, which is why doctors just generalize a life expectancy. Each person is different and the degree and extent of their illness is so variable. My dad's doc said he would live 3 to 6 months with his brain cancer. He died in 2 1/2 months. I don't blame hospice. They kept him as comfortable as they could during those short months. Cancer killed him.
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Sadgirl1, my sincere condolences on this painful loss.

I think fewer people would be so devastated and guilty-feeling if they read the hospice agreement and knew to protocol going in.

For example, it is standard procedure to remove all drugs except those used for comfort. Lortabs (I think) might come under comfort care, but it is possible they couldn't be given in addition to the stronger pain medication they administered. As I understand it, Lortabs are to eliminate pain; they do not extend life. I don't think that even if you fought to have her take them (and won) it would have extended her life span.

Hospice took my husband off almost all of his pills. They added two back in when I reported he was agitated without them. There goal is to keep patients calm and pain-free. They are not unreasonable about following their "rules" if those rules are not meeting that goal. My husband was not in pain. I did not give him morphine or ativan. Hospice did absolutely nothing that could have hastened his death. But he died earlier than we expected anyway. The hospice nurse was surprised when I called her. His autopsy revealed an extremely severe case of LBD and also that his heart disease would have taken him very soon anyway -- the doctor remarked he was surprised he hadn't died of that earlier.

Sometimes the actual causes of death is not so apparent on the outside. Even the experienced professionals are very often wrong in predicting life expectancy. Just because her doctor thought she might have had 2 months left doesn't mean she wouldn't live 5 months or she wouldn't die in 3 days. Nobody can say that with certainty.

Please, please Sadgirl, do not torture yourself with "what ifs." Do not feel guilty. Your mother was dying when she entered hospice. There was nothing you could have done to change that fact. The timing of death is out of our hands, or hospice's hands. Your mother and my husband died when it was their time.
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Yes I sure do. My mom was the same way. We were going to transition her home as soon as we could hire help for her at home. They knew this. They would not give her home meds or water but surely administered the Ativan and Morphine, in which before she was placed in Hospice she only took 1 to 2 Lortabs a day. She was alert and talking when she got there and 7 days later she passed away. I do believe they quickened her death. Her doc said that six months would be stretching it but if he were to guess he would guess that she had 2 months to live. Well that is 2 months we could have had with her. Who are they to say when someone should die. She should have been given her home meds and she should have been given water in which my sister and I did until she could not swallow hardly anymore. I feel so guilty that I did not fight for her against them but I was distraught with losing her. But I want to let everyone else to be aware that if you are capable of seeing your loved one go downhill so fast...check into it and try to stop what may be going on that may be quickening your loved ones passing. I miss my mom tremendously. It hurts so much.
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Sheila: Sorry to hear about your loss, I am kind of accepting life and death. No matter how they die either rush to die or die with their own natural course but the bottom line is they are gone and we can not bring them back. Join kind to every human being while we are still living and enjoy each other one moment at the time and we can not unwind the clock just remember the good memory.
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I'm just flying home from my Dad's funeral. What you stated could have been my Dad. I was pressured to sign a DNR. Afterward I overheard the nurse say did you get Mr.-----. Squared away. They walked into the room and told my sister he wouldn't make it till the next day. He died early in the morning. He was admitted for end stage Alzheimer's yet he knew us and talked until he was admitted to hospice. Not one time did he forget who we were or what was going on.
Sheila
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I'm just flying home from my Dad's funeral. What you stated could have been my Dad. I was pressured to sign a DNR. Afterward I overheard the nurse say did you get Mr.-----. Squared away. They walked into the room and told my sister he wouldn't make it till the next day. He died early in the morning. He was admitted for end stage Alzheimer's yet he knew us and talked until he was admitted to hospice. Not one time did he forget who we were or what was going on.
Sheila
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I was caregiver for both of my parents as they both succumbed to cancer deaths recently. At the very end, I, too, wondered if the heavy sedation ordered by the doctors had hastened their deaths. I had to give the medication to my mom myself- a suspension of Ativan and liquid morphine every 2 hours for 13 hours to keep her from seizing until nature took its course. Dad was in the hospital, severe nausea and vomiting blood/bile for 12 hours before he, too, was heavily sedated with dilaudid. His vitals crashed and he died rather quickly thereafter. The question still nags me, but I try to remember that for both of them at that stage in their respective illness, death was imminent, regardless of the sedation. What was achieved was an end to their suffering, and that was not only what I wanted, but for both my mom and dad-- their EXPRESS wish. So, when I'm left to struggle with the ethics of their having too much sedation, I have to remember that you have to take the "good", or benefit along with the "bad" (the guilt), and that helps. I hope it helps some of you, too, who struggle with this issue. In my case, I did do right by them in the end.
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HospiceRX, what you said I'm sure is true for you, but it is not true in many people's experience of Hospice. And it was not true for our family's Hospice Journey. My mother was in no pain, was able to raise her eyebrows, smile and indicate "yes"; or purse her lips, frown and indicate "no" very clearly and she repeatedly said "no" when asked if she was in any pain, or if she wanted any pain relieving drugs. Our hospice nurse shouted at me, "of COURSE she's in pain, they're ALL in pain! And because she can't TELL US, we have to ASSUME she is in pain and we HAVE to give these medications!" I had alternative therapies which completely relieved any breathing distress, but she would not wait, observe and see the effectiveness of anything that wasn't her protocol. Then she went off and reported me to adult protective services, hoping to get my mother taken to a hospice facility where she could die a properly drugged death. I could see my mother's consciousness was already crossing and elevating beyond her body, for weeks before she passed, she would come in and out of body. The gentle alternatives helped without clouding her consciousness at all. It was her death and she did it in her own way, and in the way she had requested ahead of time, in writing. And I had to defend her way of death FROM hospice, which is not the way it should be. On the sunny summer morning she died, we were standing over her, she gave a sigh and quit breathing. Then a knock on the door, and social services came in and totally freaked out when I said she had already died. One social worker kept saying, "don't we need to call the police if somebody dies? We have to report this, right?" Luckily the on-call weekend hospice nurse arrived, and was not the one who had called them, so this nurse assured the social workers that yes, this death was expected, and no, the police don't need to be called...she would alert the coroner. This whole silly unnecessary drama, although it bothered me and my family's sacred time between death and when they came to pick up her body, it bothered my mother not at all, as she was already far beyond us.
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Pshu33 I hadn't given up on my mother, I went with her and stayed with her. As an only child of an only child there was nobody to help and I was afraid of dropping her as she used the commode etc, very proud lady. There was only my 91 yr old stepfather with dementia who was not a nice person anyway, meddling with meds and saying inappropriate things.... No way did I give up on her though. I was there with her every single day from her diagnosis to the day she died
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I'd like to chime in again. Just thinking about my own mother. If I had to put her in hospice, I might be so tormented by her pain, that I'd want her to die sooner rather than later. However, I know my grief at losing her would be unbearable.
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I know for a fact my 84 years old friend with COPD and my 100 year old father with tube feeding and food get to his lung were rushed to die with overdose of morphine. And I strongly believe they don't have to die. Because the family member decided to give up on fhem. Overdose of morphine can kill people within a few days.
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I'm in the UK and I specifically recall the nurse saying "this is not going to hurry anything along" when hospice offered a room when my mum was getting in a lot of pain with pancreatic cancer. I had no idea any of this stuff went on that I'm reading on this thread. But thinking back, she did say that, as if to allay my fears at the start. Is the uk different? It was non profit making.
She passed that night but as she had an obstruction and internal bleeding she would have died that night anyway, but was able to do it painlessly at the hospice.
I feel for everybody affected by all this but it is making me keep going over last years events in my head and I just hope our uk hospices are run differently. I went to see a counsellor at the hospice and we talked about all this and she said doctors were able to be incredibly accurate these days and you had to trust them ... She said maybe 10/15 years ago accidental overdoses may have occurred but would never have been deliberate as that is illegal. But these days they are able to be very accurate with their dosage.
Death of a loved one is traumatic enough to cope with, having these thoughts is just too much.
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The hospice nurse wanted to start taking my wife down with the morphine 0.5mg but my wife told them that she didn't need it!!! With that being said they could not give it to her!!! She was nt in the much pain yet so she was able to refuse the morphine!!! The nurse that we had was a respectfull amd honored my wife wishes!!! The one nurse we had to sit her down and tell her nt to talk that death (negative) things to my wife like it's ok if your ready to go when my wife WAS A STRONG LADY OF FAITH (GOD)!!! (MIRCLE DO HAPPEN IF IT'S GOD WILL) SHE WAS A MIRCLE AND GOD BROUGHT HER THREW SOOO MUCH BEFORE SHE HAD CANCER!!! GOD SAID IT WAS TIME FOR HER TO COME HOME NT MAN!!! NOW SHE IS AT HOME WITH OUR LORD AND SAVIOR JESUS CHRIST!!! NO MORE PAIN!!!! STAY ENCOURGE AND GOD BLESS!! Susanleigh416 PLEASE HIT ME UP I WOULD LOVE TO SPEAK WITH YOU IF YOU LIKE!! GOD BLESS YOU SWEETIE!!! :)
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Hello everyone I lost my wife due to liver cancer in February 2013 and she was a fighter!!! When her daughter put her in a nursing home she went down(depressed) nt eating sleep alot she hadn't had the morphine yet she was taking other pain meds at the time and they weren't even strong enough to put her in a coma or make her nt eat! She didn't really want to be bothered which I can understand but PLEASE PAY ATTENTION WHAT I AM SAYING!!!! GOD is GOOD ALL THE TIME!!!! I stop working so she could come home and I took care of her alone with the hospic nurse! When she came home my wife after 2 days starting eating getting up out of bed talking and laughing with her family and friends! She even dance with me!!! Her friends came over and she slow dance with one of her best friend (even though she was nt feeling her best she tried)!!! This was in December early January I would say!! She didn't need her morphine just yet she was taking perks nt even her ativan! Thank you GOD AND JESUS!!! My wife was a retired nurse and full of life a people person who loved helping others!!! We were a gay married couple and it wasn't legal here in Indpls yet because if it was she would have never been in a nursing home PERIOD!!!! she didn't deserve that and her evil daughter and son did her wrong!!!!! KARMA DO I NEED TO SAY MORE!!! Moving...right alone....my wife told me that she here wanting to eat was going away. ...and slowly she stop but she still.wanted her ice cream and berry blend juice which she called it her sluggish eee :) because that's how she like it! Then she started needing the morphine 0.5mg and ativan the nurse could not believe that she lasted as long as she did plus nt needing the morphine or ativan until the last 2wks! (NEVER GIVE UP ON YOUR FAITH OR YOUR LOVE ONES) then she started nt wanting to drink and without warning she went into a coma and that lasted for about a week then one night she started breathing funny and I knew that she was going to be with the LORD!!! I THANK GOD FOR GUIDENCE AND HAVING THE NURSE, HER OLDEST CHILD, AND FRIENDS THERE WITH HER AND I!!! GOD DOESN'T MAKE MISTAKES!!! GOD IS AWESOME AND MORE THEN WORTHY TO BE PRAISE AMEN!!!! I MISS HER AND LOVE HER SOOOO MUCH!!!! IT COULD HAVE BEEN ALOT WORSE BUT GOD MERCEY AND GRACE IS BEYOND AWESOME AND HE SAID THAT HE WON'T PUT NO MORE ON US THEN WE CAN HANDLE!!!! I FEEL THAT HE WOULD NOT BRING US TO IT IF WE COULDN'T GET THREW IT!!! GOD BLESS YOU ALL AND FEEL FREE TO ASK ME ANYTHING OR IF YOU NEED SOMEBODY TO TALK TO HIT ME!!! #NEVER STOP PRAYING#NEVER GIVE UP#HAVE YOUR LOVE ONES AT HOME!!!#TAKE CARE OF THEM!!!#GOD IS BEYOND AWESOME!!!!#KEEP THE FAITH!!!#FAMILY AND FRIENDS!!!!
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Hospice killed my father. He had an attorney appointed guardian for 3 years, then I (daughter) was appointed interim guardian (about 2 months before he died) until a hearing could take place. I tried to reduce drugs dosages and remove some of the harmful drugs they had him on. Hospice bullied me untill I was backed into a corner. When I held my ground, they reported me to Adult Protective Services and the probate court who ordered him back on hospice. This was Heartland Hospice; and the assisted living where my father lived sided with hospice b/c they wanted Dad to stay there to collect his money. I believe Hospice and the nurses at the assisted living gave him lethal doses of Ativan and Morphine. He died 2 weeks later.
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Jingalingaling: Cancer patient I agree to give them morphine to comfort them. My mom has kidney cancer and spread to her bone, she was in great pain, I rather let her go then seeing her in pain, after morphine she was hardly awake and what a point keep her alive? She either in great pain or get knock out by the morphine. But with my Dad's case he has a stroke from his fall two weeks later, the doctor was aware he has a stroke, he passed out we sent him to Emergency Room, the internal medicine doctor said he just has his diabetes shock, I was the one insist to check and see he has a heme. stroke at that time I have a 84 years old friend has a heme. stroke that is all I know about stroke, they took a scan they told me he doesn't have a stroke and send us home. A week later he can not talk and his right side of his chin drop and none of us know he is having an ishemic stroke. We send him back to the hospital and I insist the hospital to tube feeding him, I don't want my dad to have the same experience like my mom, before she died she started vomitting with blood because there were no food in her stomach for so long. The doctor gave him 24/7 tube feeding I question the reason 24/7 and she said the doctor wants his stomach full all the time so the blood will go up to his brain I believe this is a wrong reason to feed the patient 24/7. My girl friend suggest me to request the nurse to sit him up periodically so his lung will get some excercises so the lung is important too. The nurse replied they have to request a special equipment to pull him up and sit him up on the chair, and the equipment will arrive Tuesday. At Monday night 1:00am the 911 report stated the nurse went and adjust his feeding tube, by 3:00am they have to call 911 to send him back to the hospital from the nursing home. I requested the Medical Records from the nursing home they are very sensitive about why I need their Medical Records and took them 5 months to give it to me, and the hospital only took them 3 days to give me the full medical records, that make me doubt about the motivation of that nurse went into my father's room adjust the feeding tube on purpose? They have been telling me all day on Sunday your father is dying, do you know that? I told her please do not talk about my father like that, he may be 100 years old but he is a very strong man. He has a big fall and none of us aware there is a stroke will come after two weeks even the doctor at the hospital did not forseen that and send us home. Now they decided to overdose my father with morphine so called comfort care and let him go because the food got to his lung? And he was breathing on his own without help for three days. I doubt seriously whether his death is a wrongful death by overdose him with morphine.
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Jingalingaling, did/does your father wish to be on hospice? It is not mandatory, you know.
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I am afraid hospice is used to save doctors. This is about morphine overkill and hospice. My father is 60 and has had cancer for 10 years. He's at home with "end of life palitave hospice care" that I do not think he needs...They (a learning hospital) collapsed his veins so he needs hospice for the picline they put in him for dehydrating electrolytes (nutrition bags not approved by doctors despite my concern) and now for a physical dependence on morphine which ruined his hygene. He has basically 4 feet of small intestine left and the stoma has a fungal...shall we say...outbreak and the pic line site has it too and he needs these rescue doses of liquid M.S. mostly every night aside from being on it all day on 3mg that I was not ready for. (no doctor talked to me just a bunch of protocols from hospice nurses). Simply put if they do not know the law they shouldnt be overriding my authority (like cutting out his intestines and giving him a stoma because well "inflammation") and they say he has colon cancer which they didnt touch and now liver spots. The pump safety shut off valve (these things are a joke) was overridden and he had a stroke on it while at oncology prior to hospice. Every time I describe something as a "condition" they renegotiate the term with "symptom" The surgery was a good thing but it metastisized into liver and a few catheters have hit his nerves recently and over the years (no big deal). The rest of it is overkill to be frank. They send him things he doesnt need like needle caps....hundreds of needle caps...One doctor berates me after being confused why I want him "revived". with "why do you want treatment but are refusing it" (does he mean chemo?) I could barely understand him and he seemed ticked. (I never dialed 911 in the first place) He needs medication/painkiller/something (not morphine) that is more bioavailable and readily absorbed by the liver and colon to heal it so can can get a stoma reversed and stop dehydrating/starving to death...But now I cant get him off morphine or get him to wash or bath (was bathing before morphine) and am afraid he will die of a stroke, heart failure, kidney failure etc..I am afraid he is starving to death but he eats nothing but indoor grown vegetables, oils, fruits, cheese, sodium chloride and turkey bacon/crumble. He is in alot of pain right now and trying to sleep and I know something that works better than morphine for pain and cancer but I am treated like a fool when I mention it because well morphine is so good. Why did they send him 100's of needle caps?
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There are even hospital docs and nurses who give these sedatives even if the patient is not needing it and even if the patient cant have it cause of a reaction or it is a danger because of their age.Our mom was out cold from an ativan overdose and the nurse was yelling out dnr and ativan at the same time. Overdosing her cause the staff would not start her heart after it stopped from the overdose because of the the dnr that she had.She had a good life before the medical staff got a hold of her that severely drugged her.
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I am a hospice pharmacist and we do not put someone on routine around-the-clock morphine and Ativan unless their pain is severe and their end-of-life anxiety/distress warrants this. I work for a large hospice facility and some of our patients have been on hospice for years (they are recertified every 6 months). Please consider that your loved one would have been in pain or anxiety without the use of these medications. Hospice does not hasten the inevitable. The RN carefully evaluate the need for these meds and they are truly experts in their field. Every prescription including the scheduling is reviewed by either a doctor or a pharmacist with prescriptive licensure. Hope this helps with the grieving and comforts you all that have lost loved ones. Hospice and Palliative care have been shown to extend the life of patients (see PubMed for scientific articles).
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Watching my beloved MIL die while in a hospice program was so painful I felt like i needed morphine and Ativan to get thru it. Without going into a long tirade I will say hospice programs and providers have their place altho I think perhaps their practices should evolve and improve over time as most things do. Not everyone on hospice has metastatic cancer. Not every condition is necessarily excruciatingly painful as was our family's case. So to watch your loved one instantly fall into that stupor is unsettling to say the least. Sitting at their bedside for eight long days and nights while waiting for the drugs to do their job was almost unbearable. I was there holding her hand when she briefly opened her eyes and tried to speak but was unable. I saw the fear and confusion on her face and the tear run down her cheek when I swabbed her mouth. The last few days there was no apparent awareness on her part at all so I pray the drugs did eventually comfort her as she seemed to pass peacefully in the end. More than hospice hastening her death (which they absolutely did but i understand that's what they do, and not necessarily intentionally) I rather felt like she was not quite ready and their protocol was perhaps started too soon etc. My husband and his brother have some mixed feelings about some of the decisions their sister made but that's more a topic for a different thread than a bash against hospice.
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It does not make any sense when the family says the patient has a bad reaction to a sedative or staff know that the sedative will harm someone because of their age why on earth is it given.Then another insane thing that is done is why on earth is a sedative given when it is not even needed. When the family is there or when the person is in the hospital trying to recover from a sedative overdose already that the staff gave them before. than they are given more. How can the staff take a healthy elder person and then continue to harm the already over dosed patient with more deadly sedatives. I'm talking about this happening in the hospital and then hospice finishes the person.Maybe when things like this happen one can only assume that murder is involved. What else can it be. I have tried to come up with every scenario possible but have yet to come up with anything that did not involve murder. It would be the same if a person driving down the street saw a pedestrian and did not feel like stopping and hit the pedestrian rather than a person driving down the street and was not able to stop in time. the staff that dealt with my mom did not want to stop at all leave alone stop before they killed her. They just kept going until she was gone.
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PBfordad, I went through the same thing and I agree with you 100% They also gave my dad adivan too much of a dose and when I told them NO morphine they did it anyway the next day and I lost him. Thank God I had the priviledge of getting the whole day to say how much I loved my dad and yes, hearing is the last thing to go so he heard every word of how much you all loved him and my dad heard it too. I HATE hospice! And I was and still am a mess!
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I feel your pain. It sounds similar to what I went through with my dad. I only wish that I had MADE the nurse postpone the pain meds so that I could talk to him one more time. They were insistent on "keeping him him comfortable". My daughter held his hand and he responded to her slightly squeezing it without opening his eyes. I did not know that he could hear what people around him were saying until later. He opened his eyes only once when his great granddaughter said "I love you Great Papa" and he opened his eyes and said "baby!" and fell back into his medicated sleep state of morphine and Ativan! He died a few hours later when they kept going up on the strength of the meds. later. I was such a mess!
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To Rosie,
I believe 100% that hospice rushes death. My mother had a kidney that was nicked during a biopsy. She was bleeding internally. The bleeding had stopped at the hospital, and she had been given 10 pints of blood. However, the internal bleeding pooled in-between her cavities and organs. We did a cat scan 7 days into the hospital and it had started to shrink. However, she got a case of ild pneumonia , and had been struggling with congestive heart failure, and myleolukemia for about a year. She had just come to visit me out of state the month before the biopsy, and was getting around just fine. So the blood cancer was not affecting her that badly yet. She had 3 heart attacks over the years, but was one tough cookie. As I said, she had just visited me a month prior to the biopsy. At the hospital, she was in so much pain, that the doctor had a meeting with all the family. We just wanted her out of the pain from the biopsy, and more comfortable while she could get a chance for her body to fight the kidney healing on its own. The pneumonia was mild as I said. We had no idea that when she was taken to hospice to get more "comfortable" that she would not be speaking anymore as of that night. She had been waking up off and on just fine in the hospital, but in pain. The night before transfer to hospice, my son had stayed in her room with her joking all night when she'd wake up. She was in high spirits, but when the pain kicked in, it was horrible. We opted for the hospice, thinking it would focus on her pain, and with the pain relived a bit, along with the stress that comes with that, her body might start to heal. No. First night, she was out on the meds. When I told the nurse around 4 A.M the next morning that I was in shock that the meds were so heavy she could not talk anymore, she said they were making her "comfortable". I went outside to grieve. The nurse came out and said (coincidence) she's awake come talk to her. When I did, my mother knew, and said this was it, and that it was so hard. We got about one hour, that I will forever be grateful for to talk, then they came in and gave her the meds. She was out. She died the next morning. She never woke up again. My daughter jumped a plane, that is only a one hour flight, and I could tell she wouldn't even be able to talk to her grandmother again. My mother couldn't talk, but they said she could hear, so I put the phone to my moms ear as my daughter was boarding her plane. She died 20 seconds later. This all happened over a day and a half. I'm heartbroken. Hospice nursing staff were exceptional to her, but yes, they take them down, and fast.
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