This is re: my motherinlaw. I was not her main caregiver but did visit regularly. Home ho ice was just a bad experience. First,
They took her off of all maintenance medications at once. (Thyroid, blood pressure, blood thinners, everything.)
In spite of this she was mentally stable/alert, was eating and drinking, enjoyed television programs and visits with family.
She did OK for a couple of weeks until she became confined to bed for a few days and then decided to get out of bed herself. This is when the real problems started. She was put on an antipsychotic "for anxiety" 24/7. She rapidly started to deteriorate. The only time she was off was during inpatient respite (she was a little confused but was fine without medication.) As soon as she got back home she was put back on the antipsychotic. It made her anxious, constipated, her stomach hurt, she barely communicated, she stopped eating & drinking and eventually died. Beginning to end of home hospice care was approx. 7 weeks.
I had the feeling the hospice nurses cared more about keeping her quiet & keeping her caregiver happy than caring about the patient's needs.
Delerium is part of dying, it is not caused by Hospice, but alleviated by them.
The caregivers are not happy, not a bit, don't kid yourself.
Candee, I suggest you be there for the whole 24/7 ordeal for 7 weeks and then decide if you want to go it alone without Hospice to help. Seriously.
Some nurses & caregiver want nothing more than to sedate a person until they die. My MIL went from a competent, happy person to a drooling, mumbling skeleton within weeks. All she had was chf. No stroke, nothing. It was clearly from her meds.
Death is never "good" but we can ask for death with dignity. Hospice did nothing but strip her of her dignity.
You had your experience, I had mine & I'm just as entitled to share as you are. Let it be a warning: if your loved one is being heavily sedated, that's NOT what hospice is for. Unless family members stay involved and question these meds and stick up for their loved ones, the end can be a living hell. Pain control is one thing. Chemical restrain without accountability is another.
At these times, the patient's safety is seriously threatened. From what I have read, such meds are given to help calm the patient, to make them more comfortable when they are feeling pain.
CHF is no walk in the park, blood moves through the heart and body at a slower rate, and pressure in the heart increases over time. Sounds like your MIL was in Stage D, where the pressure becomes very painful, probably the reason your MIL kept getting out of bed. Thus the reason to take something to calm her down.
She said she wasn't in pain but was the type of person that only took Tylenol and low doses of maintenance meds (thyroid, hypertension, ...) her whole life. She was prescribed up to 2mg haldol every 4 hours and was given it around the clock. At first she said she didn't want it and said it made her feel trapped, drugged, confused....so, instead of changing it and giving her something weaker, it was crushed & put in her food. She was not suffering from dementia & definitely not a stupid woman. She knew what was happening and eventually gave up. I saw a picture of her from just a month before she died and the difference was staggering. Very sad.
I'm much younger than her but also have a medical condition that can ultimately leave me debilitated so maybe I'm just better at putting myself in her position than her caregivers were. I'd honestly rather call a "Dr. Kervorkian" than go through that.
Thank you for listening & for your input. Any more comments are welcome. Even if we disagree it is good to get different perspectives and healing to get it out.
It can be totally shocking to see how quickly a body can deteriorate at the end of life -- with or without hospice. In most cases hospice does not cause this (through drugs, for example) but attempts to deal with it in a dignified and humane way. I am very sorry if that was not the experience your loved one had.
I found hospice to be very willing to work with the caregiver (me) to make adjustments to meds. Because of the particular disease my husband had I told them I would not be giving him Haldol, so they left it out of the comfort medicines. We tried going without several meds he had been taking but he had adverse reactions to that, so they put him back on them. They respected him and also respected my observations and opinions. They provided medications but it was up to me to administer them.
I could be wrong, but I think your dissatisfaction is as much with the primary caregiver as with Hospice. If the caregiver did not agree to give haldol every four hours, your MIL would not have gotten it. If you had been the primary caregiver, the hospice experience would have been very different.
My condolences on the death of your mother-in-law, who obviously meant a lot to you. Thank you for taking the time to share your hospice experience with us.
We have almost two dozen hospice organizations in my area. I have looked through them to identify the ones I thought the best. Two of them rose to the top -- good services, good client reviews. I know we'll be calling one of these two companies if it comes time. Sorry that you had a bad experience, but for many hospice has been a godsend. I have to admit that I don't like the idea of haldol in this day and age. It can turn a person into a zombie at high enough doses. I think I would have asked if there was something less strong that would have done the trick. This is just my personal feeling about the drug.
I work hospice cases as a nurse and my dad died while in hospice care and I don't know any hospice patients who are "competent and happy". I have to wonder what else was going on that either you don't know or that you haven't shared because hospice doesn't treat medically stable, healthy people which is what you inferred your MIL was. And if she was, hospice was the wrong call to make. Who made that call? FIL? An adult child?
Hospice doesn't make people sick and out of their mind. Once hired (hospice doesn't run around like Superman making decisions for others) hospice removes all medications (and the family is aware of this and literally signs up for this) so we can see what the baseline is. Without the meds how is the person's function?
When hospice is hired there are many forms to sign. The RN speaks to the family before service begins, the social worker speaks to the family before service begins, and there's usually a hospice rep who speaks to the family before service begins. There is nothing gained by not explaining every little thing to the family first. And only when all of that has been discussed does the family sign the papers.
Did your MIL's family sign the papers? Did your MIL's family know that they could have stopped hospice at any time? It happens. People go on hospice and then rally and then the family stops the service (usually only to go back on it a few weeks later).
No one is forced to do anything. I've had families call me at 2am because they were upset about something or they had a question. I am always on call when I have a hospice case and always available for the family and the patient. Your MIL should have had the same thing and her family should have been encouraged to call with any questions.
7 weeks is a long time. Halfway through that why didn't you say something? Why didn't you tell someone that you were uncomfortable with something?
Maybe the hospice provider you chose was unprofessional. Maybe they weren't on hand to answer questions or maybe they ignored phone calls but I don't think MIL's family was completely without resources during those 7 weeks. If it was so awful why didn't someone say something?
Other patients with Leukemia stayed away from her. Fear of their own possible demise drove them away. Perfectly natural to do that, but it does not change the outcome.
My MIL ended up in the hospital (acute exacerbation of CHF) several weeks before this stay at her daughter's house. With the guidance of her adult children, she signed herself up for hospice care and was discharged to a nursing home. Since she couldn't do physical or occupational therapy (she was weak from the chf, but there weren't any other problems that I know of) she had to pay "room and board" right away. (Hospice care, a new bed, wheelchair, & other things were covered by insurance.) She always had an active social life and for years there was a recurrent theme of this friend or that friend ending up in a nursing home and having a terrible time. MIL never wanted to end up in a home! So between that and the money being spent, going to her daughter's house made sense (the entire family wasn't on board with it but my husband and I were very supportive of the idea since it's what she wanted.)
Since her care was now under hospice she was assigned a hospice primary care physician. Her pcp stepped aside as a professional courtesy to the hospice doc. This is another problem because that pcp knew nothing about her!! I think if her original pcp was involved things might have been different (she had him for years and was treated conservatively but excellent.)
Those in the family that didn't agree with the home hospice ended up stepping aside. They visited but didn't question much because they didn't agree with the idea in the first place. As for myself, I did say something several times. I was pretty much told that only the siblings could talk about it. So I got after my husband. Showed him info about the drug, talked to his mom in front of him, things like that. Unfortunately, he didn't do anything. (& yes, I'm very,
very upset with him.)
What bothers me is the hospice provider left it to my sister in law (who is not medically trained) to make too many decisions and they never questioned her. For example, if it was a nursing home or hospital, there would have to be careful documentation of the medications given. She simply wrote in a notebook "gave mom crushed meds." No dose, no name of the drug, nothing. (Just time and date) Same with morphine, which last I checked was a controlled substance. I also mentioned above that when MIL went in for respite, the hospital didn't give her all that medication and she was fine. A little confused but was eating, drinking and pleasant. She slept a lot and was calm. I think the home nurse should've followed up and made sure MIL needed to go back on the medications. The hospice and hospital are connected so it wouldn't have been a big deal to see how her respite week went.
I realize she was dying and the end result would've been the same. All I'm saying is in this case, hospice was no help at all.
So she goes to DIL' house and I am sorry but it sounds like she was "done in" for a lack of a better term.
Your comment "so between that and the money being spent", it was the money being spent. Someone made the decision and got away with it that mama's money that they wanted wasn't going to pay for a NH.
Sounds like hospice was brought in long before it was actually needed and that killed her.
I would not have taken her into my home because I'm sick myself. I think the best thing would've been to keep her at the nursing home and get her counseling or an antidepressant or both. Like I said she was social. She loved bingo and before she left the nursing home she woukd sit by some ladies and make sure they had all their numbers covered. She had frequent visitors and the care was good. Hindsight.....
I'm going to hang around here, read, contribute when I can and keep oreocessing this.
I sincerely appreciate the ideas and the welcome.
Who is going to protect the patient from an unqualified or overwhelmed caregiver if not the hospice program?
As I noted above, MiL was not on the haldol at all during respite week. We asked and inpatient hospice said "it's prn (as needed) she is fine. She is sleeping through the night and pleasant. We will give it if she needs it." They never did.
I realize the outcome would've been the same, but her quality of life was much better without that drug.
I still can't stop thinking something was missing in this home care hospice case.
My mother was on hospice in a nursing home. The family was very active in monitoring her condition. The nh staff administered the drugs, but on the care plan drawn up by hospice. Hospice listened to us. When we wanted a drug changed from prn to scheduled, that is what they instructed the nh to do. I was the contact person for hospice, but all family decisions were thoroughly discussed with my sisters. That was my doing, not something hospice required. They need to deal with one decision-maker.
Candee, if a medication is available prn, someone has to decide when it is needed. It sounds like you disagree with the family member who was making those decisions at home. That is not really, in my mind, a hospice problem.
I am so sorry that concern over MIL's care in her final days is adding to your grief at this time.
those of you in this thread who argue meds with docs or nurses i disagree with . you and myself know squat about medicine , we should only inform those in the field about our observations of behavior . my mom was tranq'd her last three months of life with haldol to calm her hallucinations . by her own admission it helped her immensely . if it hastened her death in any way im glad it did , she was gone in the head and had no QOL ..