Pea-n-Me
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 41,318
I've been thinking about how best to post a subject like this here. Here goes, in the hopes it might help someone else.
These 5 words were the words that helped us make a very difficult decision recently, and sadly, I had to find them on my own.
I hope they help someone else like they did us.
From another thread, here's what happened, in a nutshell:
It was unfortunate that this came up on a weekend when support staff at the nursing home weren't around to help us. I found an article about end stage Alzheimer's that explained this concept and that is ultimately what helped us keep it in perspective and go forward with the recommendations of my aunt's medical team. I hope it helps someone else faced with an awful situation like this.
These 5 words were the words that helped us make a very difficult decision recently, and sadly, I had to find them on my own.
I hope they help someone else like they did us.
From another thread, here's what happened, in a nutshell:
My cousin and I were in this type of situation just two weeks ago. My aunt (who was like a second mother to me; I helped her son, an only child, with her care as she battled Alzheimer's for the past decade) had a disease of her brain but the rest of her body was strong. She'd begun aspirating and they told us it was "the end", that we should just let her go. Huh?This meant stopping all meds, fluids, food, basically withdrawing all care except for comfort measures and pain medication. We went back and forth all weekend about whether to bring her to the hospital for treatment and possible feeding tube placement. I supported my cousin as best I could with information and either decision, but it was really his alone to make. To outsiders, the answer seemed clear. But to those of us who loved her and knew her as she was in her prime, it wasn't an easy decision. We ultimately decided to "let her go", but sitting by her bed for 6 nights watching her die was difficult. Even to the end, my cousin was second-guessing his decision. We know in our hearts it was the right one, but it still wasn't easy.
It was unfortunate that this came up on a weekend when support staff at the nursing home weren't around to help us. I found an article about end stage Alzheimer's that explained this concept and that is ultimately what helped us keep it in perspective and go forward with the recommendations of my aunt's medical team. I hope it helps someone else faced with an awful situation like this.