Can't see how getting care in would help. He is getting weaker every day and the hospice nurse comes once a week just for support but I dont get any real help and I cant imagine getting care in would be very useful as they cant be here all the time. He is in a wheelchair mostly and goes to the toilet a lot now. I am trying to persuade him to agree to get a carer in to wash and shave him. A nice Filipino male I hope! I thought I might get an electric bed as he cant get up in bed easily but he resists any change! I thought the hospice would be more help but they dont have respite or anything really useful I have found out. Perhaps when things get worse?!! ( I am in the UK).
The problem seems to be with your husband refusing change. Likely, hospice would get him a hospital bed which makes things easier all around if he'd accept that. You could hire an in-home caregiver for the hours that you need if he'd accept that care.
I'm so sorry that you have to fight this alone. I do think that hospice is doing what they can but they won't force care on someone who doesn't want it. As your husband declines, maybe he'll stop fighting help and you can get more assistance. Communicate well with the nurse who comes. She or he has likely seen it all.
Update us when you can. We'd like to know how you are doing.
Carol
I cared for my father as he died from Lung Cancer. One thing I didn't know at the time (1974 and my first family death) was the cancer metastasized into his brain. He couldn't make good decisions. My heart goes out to you, I was lucky because my mother watched him at night and slept during the day, I had children and I would watch him during the day and still get housework done, etc. He wanted to die at home and we were able to arrange for him to die at my house. Hospice was just coming into the US and we didn't have it. I have used Hospice several times since then and found all of them wonderful. If the cancer is indeed in his brain you may just have to do whatever you need to. Also, in case you didn't know this, Lung Cancer can also migrate to the bones causing extreme pain. There is nothing you can do about him getting weaker, part of the disease. I didn't realize how bad Daddy's brain was until he sat up in bed to shave himself and he would take a swipe on his face with the razor and "dip it into the sink". I had a bowl there and he never touched it. He was going on muscle memory or whatever it was. He was like a father and mother to me and it was horrible, before it was over with I was praying for him to die.
If I had it to do over I wouldn't have tried to "get" him to eat when he didn't feel like it. His bowels were paralyzed and I had to dig the fecal matter out.
My suggestion, let him stay in bed longer. Say something like, "I'll get you up in just a minute as soon as I have (reason)". Don't try to get him up. Let him lay there if he is comfortable. Just wait and transition to a hospital bed. If he is adamant about his bed and it is too low, raise the bed. You may have to just tell him this is how it is. If you have traditional roles, this will be hard for you to be assertive, but it will save your back. See first sentence about taking care of yourself. I was lucky that Dad was ok with a hospital bed.
If he can, have him use a urinal so he doesn't have to get up so often, if you had a hospital bed he can just hang it on the side. Get a potty chair and put it by the bed if that will work.
Above all, make sure he has his financial affairs in order. My father didn't have a will, we got one. He had to "retire" or mom wouldn't have had a pension, we took care of that. Within a week after doing the financials he couldn't sign his name. If they had POAs at that time I didn't know about them. I did ask him where he wanted to be buried, he wanted to be in a small cemetery near his home that I didn't even know existed. I was able to get him there. This is just touching the heartbreak and agony.
A lot of my friends gave me advice that just didn't work. I would advise you to talk to the social worker from hospice for help, they know what they are doing. They are not "killing your husband", they are there to make his passage easier.
One girlfriend wanted me to put him in a hospital because she didn't think my kids who were about 9 and 11 should see him dying. I asked them if they would feel better if Grandpa went to the hospital. They said no, they wouldn't be able to see him if he left the house. Back in those days kids weren't allowed in the hospital. They were a lot of company for him. They would do their homework in his room and watch TV "with" him. Even after 42 years I am going to cry when I relate this. One morning they stopped by his bed to kiss him before they left for school, he said, "Don't go to school, stay home and we will go fishing". He was bedridden and paralyzed on one side.
Since he is on hospice, he is going to die, I am so sorry you are going through this, if you go to church, get help from your pastor. Get all the help you can, have someone else do housework or just let it go. My heart is with you.
Also, be sure he is getting enough pain medication.
There is no heroic measures to revive the patient. Bless you in getting the care you need!!
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