Her pain is terrible and she has to take Codeine and Paracetamol (she's tried other painkillers with bad side effects). She wants to avoid an operation due to having a stroke and age, but she is so sick of taking painkillers all day - they are making her sleepy and feel crazy! Any advice or help would be really appreciated.
You just have 2 stay on top of everything and everybody to make it work.
Any that decrease inflammation, help both to lower pain levels, and also, help body repair itself.
Hospice practitioners know, that dosing anti-inflammatory agents is FIRST choice, to reduce inflammation, THEN see if further pain meds are needed...that tactic usually allows far less narcotics to be used, which increases quality of life.
Some non-drug anti-inflammatories include:
==TURMERIC. For large problems, one might need to use larger amounts. capsules that equal about 1 tablespoon a few times a day, if pain is real bad, then decrease it to learn what is best for person. Take it with food. It tastes like Curry, because it is part of what curry is made from.
==OMEGA 3 fatty acids: for greater pain, one may need to consume 1000 mg. per day or more, of only the omega 3's. this stuff not only lowers inflammation and pain, but it helps mental processes, helps overall health. It can be got from fish oil, flax seeds, chia seeds.
==MSM: Methylsulfonylmethane. This is fundamental sulfur--NOT sulfa drugs. One cannot be allergic to MSM, or they pretty much cannot be breathing!
Fundamental sulfur is one of the body's main building blocks.
It can help decrease inflammation, decrease pain, and helps rebuild/repair body. I have started with a lower amount, like 1000 mg daily, then built up to several grams daily. Maintenance might be 1000 mg daily, and can be split over the day.
Acupuncture is great stuff, done right.
You could see if an acupuncturist in your area would teach you to do the required points, and/or, show you how to use magnets instead of needles--that way, fewer office visits to pay for.
SOME insurances DO cover acupuncture, particularity for pain control--while Medicare does not, if one is enrolled in a Medicare Advantage Plan, some of those plans DO cover it.
Group Health, in WA does, for instance...if they lack in-house practitioners for it, they will refer a person to an outside practitioner, and cover it as if done in-house.
Kaiser Permanente might do that now, too--years ago, they were just starting to get their feet wet in that art, so didn't really offer it then--they might, now.
Ask around!
She's got rheumatoid arthritis...an auto-immune issue. Which might men she is more sensitive to many medications. Talk with the Docs--they know how to arrange these things.
While there is a potential that surgery might stir up/aggravate an auto-immune issue, it is more likely that removing inflammatory issues, by replacing the deteriorated hip, might help calm down the auto-immune issue with the rheumatoid arthritis, simply by decreasing the amounts of chemicals that rattle around in the body flaring things up.
The real key is, your Mom sounds like she is raring to get out and do things--tht means she is still motivated.
Those already impaired too much by illnesses, lose motivation, and stop doing their exercises or complying with protocols that would help them--or else, they are too confused or tired to do it.
OTHER pain meds: non-standard:
While many do not live where it has been allowed for medicinal purposes,
SOME do.
It requires a medical recommendation to get Medical Marijuana.
It can be got as a Creme, which, applied to skin over painful areas, does a remarkable job of killing pain, with few side effects. Those types with higher CBD's are most medicinal and less sleepifying.
Got as a liquid, it can make some folks very sleepy, kills pain, can reduce gut irritations, relieve some asthma, and can decrease some myoclonic seizure activity.
And no, it does not cause "munchies", but, it can allow those who have stopped eating related to nausea from chemo or other ills, to eat.
It is less addictive than harder drugs, and has far fewer adverse effects.
Seriously.
So, you didn't mention mom's age?
My mom had her Rt hip done in 1996 at age 78 and her Lt done in 2003 at 85.
To be sure, my mom was in relatively good health other than her need for jount replacement. But what the anesthesia doc decided to do was give her a heavy tranquilizer intravenouslyink) + an epidural, saying that there is a dementia threat to elders with general anesthesia.
Rehab was tougher on the 2nd hip b/c of her age. The medicos seem 2 b in constant fear if addiction 2 pain meds, so tend 2 under-prescribe for pain. Many of them don't seem 2 have the sympathy or empathy 2 appreciate the pain these elders have ALREADY been thru and that they need 2 more responsive 2 the pain adjustment needs of the patient.
In my mom's case, she was in rehab @ a Skilled Nursing Facility & they were giving me notice that she needed 2 b discharged b/c she wasn't "cooperating" w/ her rehab & wasn't "progressing", a medicare requirement to stay in a SNF for rehab. I knew & could see that she "wanted" to cooperate but she was in too much uncontrolled pain when phys therapy came 2 work w/ her. I talked 2 the doc in charge of the patients at the nursing home and HE would not
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