I have posted on here many times and answered questions every now and then. Dad passed away Oct 7th 2013 from Liver Cancer . He was in a hospice facility for 11 days until he died. The day before he was admitted he was in the hospital and was talking,eating and very clear headed but his ammonia levels were high and he had been very combative, not eating and wouldn't take his meds for 4 days at his nursing home. ( He was in for a Psych Evaluation.) The hospice worker talked to me about admitting him instead of returning to the nursing home. I agreed to this and arrangements were made. He was transferred later that day and was alert and in good spirits. The next morning he was unresponsive and stayed that way until he passed. They gave him morphine and ativan around the clock. He never got any water but they did cleanse his mouth and moisten it with swabs. It seemed like he could hear me the first few days because I would shake his shoulder and say "dad". His eyes seemed to be moving under his eyelids and his mouth would move slightly. I did ask about them lowering his dosages so he could wake up a little. The nurse said he was getting a very small dosage already. I just wonder if the drugs made him unresponsive and if less was used he could have ate and drank and lived longer. I know it was time for him to go but I'm kinda puzzled about his going from complete alertness and straight into unresponsiveness so quick. The nurses did a Great job. I myself don't know how they do it. They treated dad like he was their baby. So gentle and compassionate. I was just wondering if anyone else had the feeling that death felt a little rushed once their loved one was placed in Hospice.
First off, because he isn't licensed to administer meds or even IV saline solution to his own father is illegal! Secondly, giving and even forcing IV fluids to him, when his damaged kidneys are no longer working is just plain cruel, because his kidneys aren't working to capacity, he cannot process the fluids, which is why they are giving him only limited fluids by mouth or even food, as his poor body cannot process very much.
As mentioned above, I would most definitely report your Nephew to the Hospice Nurse and Dr, and sadly, he might well be banned from being alone in the same room as him, or worse, banned altogether, and hopefully not reported to the police!
As for him being asleep, or out of it, this is to be expected, being that his kidneys Are shutting down, the chemical buildup of BUN & CREATININE from his failing kidneys, do make the patient extremely sleepy and loopy if conscious, and even make them feel euphoric. The small amounts of Narcotics, are not enough to put a healthy person asleep, but a very ill person, may very likely be deeply asleep. However, the Narcotics will not hasten his death, but keep him comfortably in his decline.
The reason I know this as it happened to my own Mom, while on Hospice, and actively dying. The Dr's explained that when the body is shutting down, and the organs are no longer working properly, and it becomes dificult and even painful for them to process food and fluids, and it's best to discontinue them.
Yes, they are often unconscious, but it's much better than bring awake and uncomfortable, or in pain. Still, they may be just "under the surface", and still able to hear you, so talk to him, play music during your visits, enjoy conversationsome with others in his presence, as this too, may bring him comfort, just knowing that you are there!
It's terribly sad, that you are losing your Brother, and I am so sorry! Use this time to be near him, speaking to him, sharing and remembering all the wonderful things you enjoyed about your shared memories.
I'll be keeping you in my prayers!
I'm gathering from your position that you are for mercy killing and that you believe it is the right thing to do?
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Please note that people who will be passing shortly sometimes get a short time frame where they appear to be improving... thus talking, eating, laughing, and everyone feels there has been this turn around in the person's heath. This phase doesn't last long, then the patient goes into the next step.
Depending on the Hospice group used, some groups have a very informative notebook that explain all the steps involved, and what will happen when. And there have been cases where a person had improved so much that they were taken off of Hospice and lived many more months or a year or two.
He was up during the night...talking and walking.
In the morning I found him cold..in bed.
I have seen a dramatic change in just hours. No morphine or hospice was involved.
Sometimes it just is what it is
I'm assuming you are asking me the question, since I debunked your "mercy killing" theory in the Bible. What's with pointing the finger about mercy killing anyway?
It is illegal and immoral in our society. There are some states in the U.S. and some countries that allow terminally ill people to end their own lives, but none that allow homicide.
We've gone over and over about the doses of Morphine, Ativan, nausea meds, etc. that hospice nurses give their patients. None of the quantities given comes anywhere near lethal doses.
I do not believe in mercy killing, I have never assisted or done that and never plan to. For me, I cannot do God's job. What I can do is relieve as much pain and suffering by administering medications and other pain relieving treatments. Now do you see the difference?
The reason no food or water is given is because when the body starts to shut down prior to the start of morphine, the stomach can no longer process food or water. Or food/water is going into the lungs and that would be very painful for your Dad.
Please please note, your Dad's timetable for passing would be the same whether Hospice was there or not. With Hospice, you know your Dad is relatively pain free.
My dad could not speak, swallow, or shuffle for a year after his several strokes and was trapped in his body by his wife who refused to "give up." If I had been in that situation, I would have preferred to be let go than to be miserably treated for a year with a ng tube down my nose, my diaper changed in front of my child, and all the other indignities of being incapacitated and unable to communicate. It is good that your dad is loved, but give him peace and permission to leave.
He went into semi-unconsciousness that afternoon and complete unconsciousness that night. He passed the next afternoon. I know we did everything we knew to do. I know I couldn't watch him suffer anymore. I also questioned whether the morphine hastened his death. But what I want to share after all of this is that death was in process already. To withhold the morphine would have kept him in pain and worsening delirium. Though I questioned if it slowed his breathing, the truth is, the death process was already irreversible. I thank the nurses for keeping him comforted in the final hours of his life. To understand, the death process of someone with disease doesn't happen in a day or two (unless an acute occurrence like an embolysm or stroke or heart attack).... the body starts shutting down over a period of weeks. Nothing was going to stop his death, so I'm glad he was comforted after 6 excruciating months of cancer treatment. And who knows how long before that he had it and lived with the pain before he was diagnosed. I am thankful the medication was available. Please don't second guess your choices with loved ones. They know you did your best. You have to know you did your best, too, with the knowledge you had. Thank you for posting this. I was concerned, too, tonight that our decisions hastened death. But after reading all of the responses, I know that is a response to the grief I am feeling tonight. I miss my dad. I miss him and cry a little every day. But I know death was imminent and we did our very best. May you find peace. May you know that your loved one understands you did your best, and they are at peace. God Bless you.
Your father was a wonderful person in the way he selflessly bore his illness and pain. he deserved his peace. May you find comfort.
The doctors and nurses can tell if someone is in pain where us, the non-medical people, are not familiar with the signs, especially if one is semi-alert [due to prion disease, a disease that is rare].
My Mom was on Hospice and I was glad she was given this care. Her dementia wasn't causing her major pain, her back was from lying in bed as she could no longer sit up, and being oh so painfully thin.
Please note there is little data to support the belief that appropriate use of opioids hastens death in patients.
My research has led me to understand that this is a widespread problem. This research includes my research online as well as to talking friends, including several doctor friends, who said this stealth euthanasia is a deeply troubling trend that is going on. So there is the rogue nurse practitioner issue as well is the hospice issue here. As you may know recently an indictment came down on 16 people running a hospice in Texas that was also overdosing patients resulting in death or serious harm. http://www.dallasnews.com/news/frisco/2017/02/28/frisco-man-15-others-indicted-medicare-hospice-scheme-used-human-life-vulnerable-stage
I don't understand why the national media is not covering this very troubling trend. I feel it is so important to make the public aware of what is going on which I believe is a sub-level of something in a gray area. I believe it is going on with the hopes that it will just become accepted into the main stream. It is stealth euthanasia. Forewarned is forearmed and I would have given anything if someone had made me aware before my father was in this situation as at that point I was too distraught to research or stand up to this bully nurse practitioner. Whether someone has 2 weeks, 6 months or two years to live no one has the right to take that away from them and hasten their death. It is more time they have to spend however they choose. They have not only destroyed my father by killing him, but they have left me deeply troubled by the whole horrendous act. Losing a loved one is hard enough, but under these conditions it is unbearable. We cannot stand for these killings
I struggle to sleep, i keep asking myself what i could i have done differently.
I appreciate the hospice nurses and the aides. I feel, heck i don't know what i feel.
My mother passed three weeks ago. The morphine is for pain and the Ativan for anxiety.
It's so difficult at this stage.
Yes, they are comatose because they are dying with or without the drugs.
I'd prefer my loved one be pain free.
Thank you,
One lost friend
And it is not unusual just before a person starts that final journey to rebound, be talkative, happy, eating, and even wanting to walk. That's nature's way of letting everyone say their good-byes. That has happen to many of us with our love ones.
Yes, morphine can be deadly if misused, like using over 200mg in each dosage. No Hospice Doctor would ever script for such a high dosage.
Hospice only uses 5mg to 15mg for each dosage, which is a safe amount. Probably no different that what hospital patients get after having major surgery. using a morphine pump to help control the pain.