At least once a week we seem to read a post here claiming 'Hospice Killed My Mother'.
Let's never forget that Hospice is a CHOICE. They can be fired at any time. Just like taking a LO into a SNF for rehab; if you don't like the SNF, take your LO out of there, like I did in 2019 for my mother. I picked a dreadful SNF, as it turned out, so I got her OUT of there and into a very nice one in short order. I didn't 'have to' leave her in a dreadful place; I had the choice to take her out of there, same goes for Hospice: If I felt they were 'killing' either of my parents, I would have fired them & taken my parents to the hospital for diagnostic testing/treatment, which is always an option.
If hospice is 'killing your LO', WHY are you leaving them under hospice care???????????
I have an idea. Let's share POSITIVE Hospice experiences for a change! I'll start:
Dad was diagnosed with a growing brain tumor in 2015 that was killing him; he was given 3 months to live and hospice was suggested by the ER doctor. Their services began shortly thereafter at the ALF my folks lived at. I did not really like the first nurse assigned to dad's care; so I called the hospice main admin line and asked that she be replaced with someone else; we had a personality conflict. They said SURE and sent out someone else who was terrific. Dad was kept comfortable for the duration of his EOL experience, not 'overmedicated' or like a 'zombie', and passed away in peace & comfort.
My mother was accepted into hospice care on 12/21 even though the nurse was a bit leeriy if she was 'ready'. She was; I knew it so I was pushing for them to accept her; she was in way worse shape than SHE let on. She had a dramatic overnight decline on 2/15/22 and went into bed, in semi-comatose condition. Hospice called me, administered light doses of Ativan every 4 hours, morphine 5 mg a few days later (added to the Ativan) when she showed discomfort upon being moved, and never increased that dosage. The CNA came to bathe her 3x (bed bath) during the week she was bedbound; the nurse came daily; the chaplain 3x, the social worker 3x, and stayed in touch with me the whole time. The chaplain arranged for a Catholic priest to go see mom and administer Sacraments to her as well. Mom passed peacefully & quietly 7 days later. No pain or suffering, and with a peaceful look on her face. EACH time meds were administered to her, hospice conferred with her PCP BEFORE they were given.
Hospice provides an extra level of care to our elders that is worth its weight in gold. Plus, if WE do not want them medicated for their comfort, we simply say NO, and meds are not administered. It's that simple, in reality. But for me, I was more interested in having my parents comfortable than worrying about 5 mg of morphine doses, frankly.
In both cases, hospice was a Godsend to me and to my parents, and I am thankful for their services. They provided both parents with a hospital bed, specialized wheelchairs, cushions, incontinence supplies, medications, all free of charge & billable to Medicare.
What's YOUR positive hospice experience?
When he arrived at the new facility, he spoke very little and wasn't pleasant to be around. Hospice asked me what his interests were and I told them just playing his guitar. They brought in a local musician who played classic acoustic rock for him. My brother started opening up, talking, smiling and laughing and tapping his hand to the music. Everyone was so surprised and it even brought tears to his hospice nurse's eyes. The next time his daughter brought his guitar so he could play along. Not that it was terrific but he got to be a musician--they had his playlists from the band so they could play familiar songs. They had several "gigs" over the summer and fall. A couple of times hospice took him and his daughter to a pizza pub where the musician had a gig. I bought him an Alexa so he could listen to the Beatles, AC/DC, whatever. Music made him so much more comfortable and happy. We wouldn't have known this if hadn't been for hospice. In February they threw a birthday party for him, with a big cake, cards and a couple of cool rock oriented presents. Plus they got the musicians in to play for him. The party really touched him--I don't think he ever had a birthday party with so much love.
The hospice nurse comes twice a week but more when his condition worsened for a while. She's kept me up to date on him, the drugs she prescribed for him and why, and she's reached out to my niece--particularly when there was bad news. She prescribed a bed that was harder to fall out of since his brain says he can walk but his legs can't. I can contact her with my questions. There's no doubt in my and my niece's mind that hospice and a great facility prolonged his life.
The staff at this nursing facility are wonderful. I can tell they really care about him. He has been in hospice for nine months now--way longer than we ever would have imagined--and I think he was happy at times. In the last month he has taken a serious turn for the worst. But even when he's resting you can tell he's listening and enjoying music from Alexa.
It's sad that people think that hospice is just for the end. If you wait til the end that feeds that perception. Our hospice created so many great memories for us with my brother and that's what hospice is about today--making the best of the time left to live.
glad they helped and gave another opinion besides the Nursing home .
I am also encouraged to talk with the nurse about any concerns I have for myself while walking this difficult Alzheimer's road.
While Hospice is usually known only as "end of life" care, it is so much more than that. I will always be grateful for having them as part of our care team.
Karen
We were asked by the hospice company’s physician to participate in a program training medical students at our nearby medical college (a major research university) on end of life care. It was a two pronged approach covering both the patient’s and the family’s perspective. Every week over the course of the entire medical school term, the same medical student came and interviewed us and my dad. She learned about the joys and challenges of life with a family member in hospice. It was the first time the university had tried this program. Apparently, the presentations made by the students for their final grade in the class were so profound that the medical school decided to make this a required class for graduation. This is how much hospice companies care about our loved ones.
I am so sorry to hear that people have the experience that leaves them thinking that hospice killed someone they love. How terrible.
The first thing my mama’s hospice nurse (she’s Catholic) did was show us the little bottle of morphine and declared emphatically that, “You cannot kill your mother with this even if you give her the entire bottle!” She went on to explain the letting go process for the patient and how it’s going to take however long it takes. The morphine is there to help them be comfortable and let go but we weren’t getting lethal doses by any means.
We received a lot of education about how hospice works and found them to be responsive to our every request. We got to know our primary nurse and a few others who would fill in, the chaplain, and the aid who would help with baths very well. My mama thrived under hospice care and we would joke about taking her off but she didn’t want to go to the hospital anymore.
We only gave mama ativan or morphine at night if she struggled with anxiety to sleep. At the very end we did give her morphine frequently since she was dying from respiratory failure and it helped calm her. I gave mama the last does of morphine before she passed and I don’t feel like I killed her.
We have recommended our hospice provider to anyone seeking hospice help and will call them when the time comes for my partner’s parents living with us now.
I have heard stories not as successful as ours so I highly recommend learning as much as possible about what to expect from hospice.
And I totally agree with you on calling the doctor or hospital if you feel it’s important. It’s OK to drop out of hospice to get care then return when necessary. My cousin has COPD and lives in a rural area where hospice is not as efficient as it is here in Atlanta so she and her doctors agreed that her DNR was sufficient in not prolonging her life while she still goes to the hospital for stabilizing care.
Without home hospice we would have had so much more weight on us navigating what to do when. We’re so very grateful they guided us through the entire experience and were there for us all. We even got a year of grief counseling and a special church service for their patients who pass.
He began spending more time in bed, was quite weak. Though he had been to the Dr. several times, he couldn't (or wouldn't) tell me what the Dr. had told him except that his previous prostate cancer wasn't the problem. From the treatment he had received, and his history as a heavy social drinker, my guess was sclerosis of the liver ( I was an RN).
He was never admitted to the hospital, but when he finally was too difficult for his wife to care for, someone called Hospice. This was not "in-patient" hospice, but a care-giver and visiting nurse provided in his home.
I had not realized how sick he really was! His poor wife was so grateful for the help. He was dying. She wasn't prepared in any way. The hospice nurse explained the treatment he had received, told her (possibly for the first time) that he was dying. She explained the symptoms she saw of his later impending death, the medication (Morphine, I think, mainly) he was being given and the reason for it, helpful techniques to position him for comfort as well as suggestions of what he might eat or drink.
I didn't know of all this until he finally passed away and I got the phone call. My sister-in-law expressed nothing but gratitude for hospice. She hadn't known of it before (and I didn't realize, myself, how ill he was). She said she felt so helpless and afraid before the hospice people came. She kept saying, "I don't know how I could have made it through this without them!"