Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#31
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First, I am sorry if you need hospice.
Second, both of my parents used hospice, but in very different circumstances. Both were positive experiences. My mother had Alzheimer's and went from memory care to skilled nursing. There is a long list of restrictions on what nursing homes can and cannot do. Any time any medical issue came up, skilled nursing shipped my mom to the hospital - even some issues that had been taken care of in memory care. Each hospital visit was scary and a horrible experience because mom was clueless as to what was going on. Hospice has the ability to take care of a lot of these issues in the skilled nursing setting. That was huge in our world. Once enrolled, she did not have to go back to the hospital. My father was in assisted living when he got the flu. He was hospitalized, his kidneys, quit functioning, and it went downhill from there. We placed him in a hospice facility. The staff was wonderful. My other experience with hospice was when I was named as part of a healthcare team for an older friend. He needed end-of-life care. When we interviewed hospice, their answers were very different then what I had been told with my mother's hospice. The other team members and I were not impressed, and we chose to provide end-of-life care for our friend in his home, hiring our own nurses and caregivers. Our friend was fortunate to have the resources to do this. So, I don't think that there is one answer to your question. In larger cities there can be several hospice entities. Be sure to talk with each one. A doctor needs to make the referral for hospice, and your post is unclear if such a referral has been made. Sending kind thoughts to you. |
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#32
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You're wrong. The family or patient can request to go to the ER if they want to at any time. I was an ICU nurse for 20 years. Took care of many patients that were hospice but when they really started feeling bad requested to go to the ER. Then we had to have the conversation of Hospice or no Hospice. A lot of patients turned into comfort care only and died at the hospital. I think sometimes family or patients on Hospice will panic and call 911 when they start feeling really crummy.
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#33
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I worked as a hospice RN for a short while. Typically our pts improved after a few weeks and died a more peaceful death.
IMO - it is a very supportive experience. |
#34
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#35
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#36
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If your loved one needs things like a hospital bed, a portable commode, a wheel chair, cleaning supplies, and some medications Palliative Hospices like Vitas are very helpful. And they do stick to the end. But if the patient improves then they will remove him or her from the Palliative Hospice. The insurance gets all this or most of it. |
#37
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I think you also sign that you understand care and comfort of the patient is the goal not prolonging life.
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Closed Thread |
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