I have no experience with this. I just wanted to say that I'm thinking of you. I know you are struggling with something very serious. My thoughts are with you.![]()
Thank you-you are so kind.
I have no experience with this. I just wanted to say that I'm thinking of you. I know you are struggling with something very serious. My thoughts are with you.![]()
This question is for anyone who has made the gut-wrenching decision not to use a feeding tube for a dying loved one.
Even though you absolutely knew the loved one did not want a feeding tube and you absolutely knew the feeding tube would only prolong the loved one's suffering,did you still live with a terrible "form" of "guilt" after the loved one passed away?
Thank you.
Sending warm thoughts to you in this difficult time.![]()
This question is for anyone who has made the gut-wrenching decision not to use a feeding tube for a dying loved one.
Even though you absolutely knew the loved one did not want a feeding tube and you absolutely knew the feeding tube would only prolong the loved one's suffering,did you still live with a terrible "form" of "guilt" after the loved one passed away?
Thank you.
Personally, I have only somewhat dealt with this twice. Close to home when my grandmother was terminal, and my dad relied heavily on me for decisions. She had stated before, no feeding tube, based on a situation with my grandmother in law...
She had been sick about 2 months before my grandmother died. Alert and oriented, refused a feeding tube. My MIL, listening to the advice of doctors, wanted the feeding tube. Grandmother in law won- and 4 years later is still alive, alert and oriented.
As a nurse, I've ran across this many times. Feeding tubes have all sorts of beneficial purposes, but what I'm about to say pertains to end-of-life, terminal processes. What I will find in most of my experience is that it's the patients/nurses vs family/doctors. This is biased, and only accounts for my experience in a few dozen cases, and it's certainly not 100% this way. However, I believe you will find if you ask your love ones if their chance for living a productive, meaningful life was nil or slight, the great majority would not want extra interventions. However, family members hate not being able to do everything- and doctors anymore will just go along with it. No time to argue, and there is a risk of being sued from those living- but the dead cannot sue, so interventions are done that in 90% of cases people would not want. Then there are the nurses, in carefully balancing being the patients advocate, the family support system, and the doctor's sidekick. The last thing we want when taking care of someone for 12 hours, several days-sometimes weeks- is to see them suffer. They may not be our family, but every patient holds a special place in our heart for a short period of time, and sometimes longer.
It's my profession and personal opinion that in the vast majority of end of life scenarios that only comfort measures should be enacted, and respect family that is able to make the hardest decision- the one to let go.
DH was diagnosed with gastric cancer and passed away 3 years ago. We would never consider a feeding tube. The reality is that so many believe that the person is "starving", when in reality the body is dying and pumping high calories through a feeding tube isn't going to change that situation. A dying body isn't going to metabolize nutrition the way a healthy one is. The end result is that the feedings just add to the discomfort because they are rarely tolerated well.
Keep them as comfortable as possible...that is the greatest gift one can give.
I see this decision faced by many families(nurse of 30 years here) and once it's explained fully the decision making process is much easier. Nutrition is only one component of the dying process and in reality it's way at the bottom of the list.
momRN and lsyorke,If you don't mind responding to one more question,I would really appreciate it.
Did I make a HUGE mistake by not insisting on Hospice care for my loved one-I feel like I definitely did.
About 2 weeks before my loved one passed away,the facility they were at asked if we wanted to call in Hospice.
Before I knew about it,another family member told them we did not want Hospice-they felt like the care by just the staff would be enough.
At that point,I could have insisted on Hospice,but this was my very first experience dealing with anything like this and I had no idea what all Hospice could have done for my loved one until after they passed away and I began to understand all that I had not done right for them.
Would my loved one have been pain free entirely those last 2 weeks-would Hospice have been there 24/7 or would there still have been times whaen they would have had to wait a while for some pain medicine?
Does everyone in my situation use Hospice for their loved one-I feel like I let them down terribly.
Thank you.
To answer your question directly, hospice would not have been there 24/7, and there would have been times your loved one would have still waited for pain medication. Maybe the hospice nurse could have worked with the staff and doctors for a more long lasting solution (pain patch? stronger pain medication?) but that depends on the people involved and various situations.
OP, youare going through one of the stages of grief,second guessing what you did or didn't do,but please know in your heart,you did the right things.
Hospice is on call 24/7, but a nurse isn't going to stay with a patient for hours,they have other patients. Patients at home get a emergency bag,which one of the drugs is morphine. My friends dad has Hospice, but hasn't gotten to the point of needing pain meds, so not sure.how that works.
Please take care of yourself.