My mom went on hospice in October. She has dementia and lot's of respiratory issues. She had been wincing when she swallowed and we asked the nurse to check it out. They did a swab (like 3-4 weeks ago) and results came in as MRSA. The AL called the hospice staff and told them to get her out of the place. (My words, but AL's meaning). Hospice took her in their in-patient unit. But they don't want her (no symptoms to treat) so I've been told they will be speaking with me tomorrow about a discharge plan. AL won't take her back til labs are negative. That will be 3 weeks. (AND yes we have to pay in the meantime!) They are suggesting SNF, which can do isolation but nothing else. My spouse has a compromised immune system, so I don't feel comfortable bringing her to my home. My Mom is 95+ but seems to have many days of surprising strength, so while anything can happen, she is not down for the count right now. Sibs are useless. Looking for everyone on this site who can share their wisdom and experience here. I want to be prepared for 'discharge discussions." Thanks
I'm pointing out that this thread is three years old, just so people don't start offering advice to the original poster.
That refers to a period of mourning after death.
We went thru sitting there watching Gma die, due to the facilities' mishandling of her case/care.
Be prepared to strongly advocate for your elder--and know that all the best advocacy still may fail.
We were unable to advocate strongly enough for ours, years ago:
their game of "hot-potato" literally killed Grandma.
She fell, went to the ER w/ mid-back pain;
the ER Doc refused to order Xrays of her mid-back, so I pleaded w/ the Xray Tech to overlap the upper and lower Xrays, to show the mid-back
--of course, that was where the break was, but the Doc was not listening--he was only cursorily reading her chart, discussing upper back and lower back issues, discussing other non-related issues...
[[plus, I think he was one who graduated far below the 50%]]
She was admitted, bedridden, then almost immediately shipped to a SNF.
the Hospital sent orders for meds by mouth--only Gma couldn't swallow properly by then, and, the orders stated she could get up and about unassisted, sit up, etc....all lies. I had to advocate again to the director of nursing at that SNF
The SNF director was furious to learn how the hospital had so flagrrantly lied--and indicated it happened all the time.
The SNF, of course, shipped her back to the hospital.
We ended up sitting shiva until she died several hours later, but at least, she had an on-demand morphine drip by then, and a Hospice nurse.
She'd been left in fierce pain, until that.
That entire charade took about 3 days.
It was absolutely malpractice, but, the hospital and SNF covered their tracks so well, lying on record, there was little we could to.
Hospitals DO lie on records.
Staff can & are coerced to re-write charting if the nursing supervisor thinks the charting might cause any hint of problem for the facility. Charting has been reduced to the bare basics, trying to avoid any mention of any bit that might indict a facility.
Charts can and are changed to reflect better on a facility, if any hint of legal action is in the wind--even if they have to fake it.
Increasingly, large corporations have gotten legislation passed protecting them from litigation /malpractice /restitution.
[[speaking from experience]]
1. The facility that currently has patient in their custody/care, is ultimately legally obligated to keep them, OR find her another facility
--otherwise, they can face "patient abandonment" charges. Tha family is not the cause of her MRSA, and cannot be forced to take her in, especially if it endangers others in the home [other elders including yourself, children, any with decreased immune function]
2. It is irresponsible for any facility to demand a family take their elder into their home, especially when others in the house are immune compromised, and the elder in question has MRSA, or any other communicable ill.
IF a facility forces a family with immune compromised members, to take the sick elder into their home [they really cannot force it, but can make you feel that way], they can also be charged with endangering other patients [at your house].
This kind of case is why those laws were made.
[[ask them: what does the facility do if a patient has no family? put them in the street?]]
Put your foot down to the discharge planners/social workers, and
==make them put note on your elder's chart that:
"Discharge to family's home is impossible"
UNFORTUNATELY, it may mean your elder gets passed from facility to facility, like a hot potato.
Facilities DO have responsibility to other paitents, sure.
BUt they also are responsible for your sick elder, no matter what the contract says.
If it means quarantine in a private room, or moving them to a different facility to handle it, that might need done.
UNfortunately, there is no good way to handle it, given how our systems are set up these days.
There are usually consequences of moving elders around--even rooom to room, as they get more confused, and sicker, often.
ADVICE: if you buckle and take her back into your home, under pressure from the Discharge Planner, NO facility will take her back, and you truely WILL be stuck. [[that's what I was told, and observed, over the last 25 years]]
Sorry about all of the acronyms, I guess I have been at this so long and on this site for so long that it's become my 'shorthand'. BTW, I did mean 'by the way' for BTW. : - ) and 'because' for b/c.
New Hampshire (NH)
Senior Living (SL)
etcetera (etc)
(the obvious, like MRI or HEP B or TB, is of course, well known. The other terms may be familiar to the writer (sorry that you actually ARE familiar with horrible abbreviations like MRSA...I always just HEARD the term, and thought it was spelled Mursa or something, never knew it was an abbreviation...dumb I guess. Thanks)
THANK YOU SO MUCH! Hugsies (HUGS)
CRE is carbapenem-resistent Eneterobacteriaceae bacteria. Very scary.
The whole "superbug" situation has facilities all in a dither as how to approach; for MRSA and C Diff at least there are tests routinely done. Personally, I'd like to see Katherine Sebilous do an emergency mandate for CRE testing for all patients over 50 who enter a hospital. At least this would create the start of a data base and then you can follow the outbreak patterns and the effectiveness of what was done. Back in my old life, I was in health planning and worked on a study involving Colistin. Scary drug as far as your kidneys go, so got out of favor. Colistin seems to be only antibiotic that's effective with CRE. Effective doesn't mean cure but rather allows it to be manageable.
If your family needs to go into a facility, you really should look to NH rather than an AL. You know AL has a totally different playbook than a NH does. AL (like an IL) can just do a "30 Day" notice and well, it's just too bad for family. AL since it is usually private pay, can set whatever terms. (Now if the AL takes Medicaid or is in some sort of state voucher system in which Medicaid is involved they can't do this as easily as a 30 Day). BUT a NH has totally different regulations and if they take Medicaid and Medicare, then they can't do a 30 day. NH has to find a comparable facility with the ability for complete care and work all this out with agreements between the next facility, the residents personal MD, family etc. And no NH is going to take a new resident who has MRSA. OK maybe a leper colony (LOL) and the last one was closed ages ago (I live in Louisiana and have been there - just gorgeous site and adjacent to white-collar prison and a Catholic retreat)
MRSA is scary and then there is the whole clusterF with CRE and how that doesn't get reported (there is NO Medicare billing code for CRE so it doesn't get reported so therefore no epidemiology followup and so no info to look at to see if it is increasing and what co-mobidities are involved). Personally I bet 30-40% of the C Diff infections are CRE.
SNF - skilled nursing facility