I don’t know where to start really. Mom has had headaches for months now. But nearly 2 weeks ago they became really bad. Her back pain also increased. Lots of nausea She does not have a UTI! Because she can still speak & walk very little with a walker she doesn’t qualify for Hospice. She’s on their Pallative & Dementia Care. Mom maybe eats an ounce of food a day & drinks little. She’s a bag of bones. Her BMI is 15. Shes sleeping 98% now. Her eyes look different. Her communication and understanding is worse. She’s fallen a few times. She’s been put on Tramadol, a steroid, pain patch & nausea med. Nothing has alleviated her headaches. I've been going round and round with Pallative Care nurse and her dr (took her in last week). Her dr said well she had a brain scan a couple of years ago-seriously? I told him so did my SIL who passed away last year from Glioblastoma. Things change! So supposedly he’s ordered one, hasn’t been scheduled. Here are some of the many things the nurse has told me: dementia pts don’t have headaches, I’m not trying hard enough to get her to eat, steroids don’t cause headaches, she even accused me of demanding she prescribe Fioricet for my mom, so many other things. I asked her if mom could get something stronger like Fioricet. She declined. She said she didn’t have a diagnosis to support that!!! I sent her the chart notes where unspecified headache is listed, still no! I truly feel like I’m failing my mom. I’m fighting so hard but getting no where. Her labs came back with lots of abnormal results. I researched to see what the common factor was and it mostly comes back to kidney failure. Nurse dismissed this too. I’m going to get a specimen cup today and take her urine back to dr for further testing. I don’t want to take mom to the ER. I’d have to call 911 because she couldn’t sit and wait. What do I do?????? I sit and cry because I’m failing her, we truly think she’s dying but nurse doesn’t think so.
IMHO: Call 911 and get her to ER!
I just recently took my mom to the ER. I called the ER first, no cases of the corona virus. She had her work up, IV therapy, and observation for the night. I was able to stay with her. I had prior authorization before I even stepped into the door. I would consider a new doctor and you may need to change nurses as well . I hope your mother gets the help she needs. The hospital followed strict guidelines and I felt safe. Your mother should not be in so much pain. I hope and pray your mother feels better and is pain free.
I would suggest moving from palliative care to hospice now. You describe someone no longer eating, and sleeping much of the time, someone who is very very debilitated and in pain. Mom will be out of pain when hospice gets there. Will that hasten her death? I have to say it will in all probability do so, but not by more than a month of two of acute suffering.
My heart breaks for you all.
I feel terrible that you and your mom are going through such "hell" and "misery!"
You seem to be more on top of things than the hospice Pallative Care Team/Doctors. Of course, I agree with all the other poster's comments about getting her to the hospital. What I don't understand is why she doesn't qualify for full out hospice care. I don't know what's causing the headaches but, even if she did have a brain scan a couple of years ago like you said things can change and it has. As for her nausea, it could be that she's in so much pain between the headaches and back pain that it is making her feel sick. I'm wondering why they didn't give her Morphine for the pain too. I know when my husband gets migraines, he gets nauseated. I don't like what I'm hearing and am very concerned for both of you. I understand you being so upset, crying and failing her (you didn't). The problems sometimes is that doctors and/or facilities don't want or like to listen to the family member. They don't always like being questioned, second-guessed or held accountable. I've experienced that with my my mom and it got very wearying going to constant battle on my mom's behalf.
My mom who is 95 with Alzheimer's was completely mobile although I did buy her a walker after Thanksgiving just to have on hand and get her used to it.
Also, she was able to dress herself. Right up until mid-April when she nearly died in her AL apartment from severe dehydration, COVID, bi-lateral pneumonia and a severe UTI. She survived and went to a rehab facility for three weeks and we had hospice waiting in the wings because at that moment she did not qualify for their care. Upon being released and having her placed in a new facility in their memory care unit, she now qualified for hospice. Why? Because she lost 20 lbs., could no longer walk and wasn't eating much. She is now pretty much bedridden and needs assistance. She has fallen at least 8 or 9 times since moving in at the end of May.
I am no doctor, but there is something very wrong going on here. Her labs have come back abnormal, her BMI is 15 and the fact that you have to take a specimen cup of her urine to have it tested is horrible. Kidney failure is a common issue. I'm actually in shock at what you are being told. Didn't the hospice company give you the booklet of the end stages of life that occurs within a years time period right down to the last week and days? I know ours did when we were given one for my dad when he was dying in 2004 and now with them being involved in my mom's care this year.
Please, please get her to someone else right away so she can be evaluated by another objective party (ER doctor) at a hospital. You know your mom better than anyone else as far as your initial instincts about the situation - follow them.
Once again, I am deeply sorry that you are going through all of this. It's hard enough seeing all the rapid changes but, when you have to take your time and attention away from being with your mom to fight for answers, tests etc. that's brutal. You will be in my thoughts and prayers and I hope you can let us know what happens! Sending you a big hug!!
(And from my web search Fioricet in America doesn't even have codeine in it, so what is that nurse's problem?)
I think perhaps you need to talk to some other hospice organizations...and point out her weight loss?
I will say that at the point that my mom was in nonspecific pain, but clearly suffering, I went to the DON in mom's NH and said "she needs morphine" (I had been told it would be available for the "end game", hospice or not, because my brother was terribly reluctant to sign off on hospice). They waffled about the morphine and I basically bullied my brother into agreeing to hospice.
Mom's pain was alleviated and she floated off 3 days later.
Find another hospice organization to come see her. Please.
I have never heard that in any context. I think that you need to fight, if not for hospice, then for adequate pain relief for your mom.
Ask the hospice folks to show you where in the Medicare regs it says that mom has to no longer be ambulatory.
colleague telling me that she was told that her dad to be considered "homebound" in order to qualify for hospice. But he was still attending church and needed to get his hearing aids adjusted.
I told her to call and ask "specifically" about those two issues and OF COURSE they were excluded from "homebound".
Sometimes the folks who read these regs over-interpret them. Get on the phone with a supervisor from the Palliative Care program. Get a new nurse and get clarification on why mom doesn't qualify for hospice.
Demand a new evaluation.
Don't take no for an answer
The main thing right now is that mom is in pain and THAT is not right. She needs better pain relief, no matter WHY she has headaches.
Perhaps she needs to come off ALL the the meds that she's on except the Tramadol to find out if any of her meds are CAUSING her headaches (why is she on a steroid; does she have inflammation of some sort?)
I found this from Visiting Nurse Service of NY:
Advanced illness patients may exhibit one or more of the following core and disease-specific indicators to be eligible for Advanced Illness Care from VNSNY Hospice and Palliative Care.
Core Indicators for Hospice:
• Multiple hospitalizations
• Physical decline
• Weight loss • Serum albumin < 2.5 gm/dl
• Infections
• Stage 3–4 pressure ulcers
• Multiple comorbidities
• Dependence on assistance for most ADLs
• Signs and symptoms such as increasing pain, dyspnea, nausea/ vomiting, edema, pericardial/pleural effusion, ascites
• Karnofsky or Palliative Performance Scale (PPS) score < 70%
Disease-specific Indicators: Dementia Due to Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders
• Stage 7 or beyond according to the Functional Assessment Staging (FAST) scale, including:
– Unable to walk/dress/bathe without assistance
– Urinary and fecal incontinence
– No consistently meaningful verbal communication
• One of the following within the past 12 months:
– Aspiration pneumonia, pyelonephritis, septicemia
– Multiple decubitus ulcers, stage 3–4
– Fever, recurrent after antibiotics
– Insufficient fluid and calorie intake
Heart Disease
• NYHA Class IV Heart Failure; angina
• Discomfort with physical activity
• Supporting factors: – Ejection fraction ≤ 20%
– Arrhythmias resistant to treatment
– History of cardiac arrest or resuscitation
– Brain embolism of cardiac origin
– Concomitant HIV disease VE-456-17-HospiceCandCard_AR_3-7-17.indd 2 3/9/2017 3:45:06 PM
Liver Disease
• PT > 5 sec, or INR > 1.5
• Serum albumin < 2.5 gm/dl
• In combination with at least one of the following complications: – Ascites despite maximum diuretics – Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis – Hepatorenal syndrome – Hepatic encephalopathy – Recurrent variceal bleeding Pulmonary Disease
• Dyspnea at rest • Recurrent pulmonary infections
• pO2 ≤ 55 mmHg (on RA) or oxygen saturation ≤ 88%
• Supporting factors:
– Cor pulmonale – Weight loss > 10% in past 6 months
– Resting tachycardia > 100/min
VNSNY also offers hospice and palliative care for patients with cancer, renal disease, CVA, HIV/ AIDS, ALS and other chronic neurodegenerative diseases. Source: Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for Hospice—Determining Terminal Status (L25678), National Government Services
I would also file a complaint against her license. It sounds like she is burned out and should not be practicing her knowledge on patients.
How is your mother? Has her pain subsided?
Please keep up updated on your mother's status.
Sending hugs and a special prayer to your dear mom.
you are doing fine and you will get her what she needs.
You are not on an easy road. I have traveled it both with my mom and with clients of the in-home elder care agency I founded. But you must find the energy to advocate for both your mom and you.
Sincere best regards.
She is completely "out of it." She fights me constantly and took swings at the last EMT crew. She hits me, won't let me change her and is just awful.
I know she needs more help than I can give her (I can't lift her and it is just me in the house) but how do I get help?
Keep doing what you are doing for your mom. Make sure to take a couple seconds for yourself each day.
If your mom is in that much pain then I would demand better drugs or different nurse / Dr. or both.
now that ive said that remember that some pain meds may NOT work AT ALL. It can be trial and error.
But also remember that there are things your mom may not be able to tell you and it may take awhile to find something that helps.
tramadol and hydrocodone have not helped me. After knee surgery I took oxycodone some nights just to help me get some sleep. If i took pain meds during the day it was aleve. i didnt take too much oxycodone since i was afraid of addiction.
if you think your mom has kidney problems see a nephrologist.
as others have told you change docs and look into other hospices unless youre in a really small town and theres nobody else. Then consider how far youd have to go to find someone that you thinks helps.
theres the old saying that a person at the bottom of the medical class is still called a doctor when they graduate but even people on other levels may not have common sense or any clue. So no matter their level keep YOUR MOMs needs in mind and that one of the best things a doctor ever told me was that if he didnt know the answer to something i asked hed find out.