I’m a palliative care nurse practitioner so you would think that my
mother would have had a good end-of-life experience, but she didn’t.
She
had done everything she could to prepare for a “good” death.” She was
aware of her health situation and willing to discuss it with her family
and health care providers. I lived nearby, was her health care power of
attorney, and we talked regularly about her wishes. She had a living
will and a MOLST (Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment) form.
And she chose to live in a continuing care retirement community outside
of Baltimore, a place with varying levels of care.
She
lived there for more than 16 years in its independent living section.
But in her 91st year, her doctor recommended hospice. The care they
provided was wonderful. My mother was comfortable, and we felt
supported.
The first challenge came when the alarm sounded on my
mother’s oxygen concentrator. I called the equipment company, and they
agreed to send a replacement. Hours went by. Calling them again, the
answering service told me if this was a medical emergency I should call
911. Then the on-call person called back to say my mother wasn’t one of
their patients. Minutes later, the delivery driver called to say he had
arrived but couldn’t find the apartment.
But the real trials came when we moved my mother to
the nursing facility within the continuing care retirement community
(CCRC). This was when we discovered that the CCRC had no process to move
her there, even though it was only a few hundred yards away. I had to
explain that taking her in a wheelchair through the public areas was not
going to work. The facility asserted that my mother’s hospice should
arrange — and pay — for the ambulance, which the hospice rightly
refused. After multiple phone calls, the CCRC ordered transport.
When
my mother finally arrived, the problems with care coordination began.
It took an hour to be seen by a nurse. The nurse said she had to check
my mother’s chart, which was puzzling because my mother didn’t have one,
having not come from a medical facility. However, without such a chart,
the staff had no idea who my mother was or why she was there, even
though her medical records from the previous 16 years were in the
adjoining clinic. When they finally examined her, they tore her fragile
skin, which bled. Finally, the charge nurse asked me for the details on
my mother’s terminal diagnosis, medical problems, medications and even
which hospice was providing her care. I could provide that, but what
about a family who couldn’t?
The charge nurse agreed that my
mother urgently needed medication for her breathing. Her physician had
ordered it, but it hadn’t arrived, and as the hours went by her
breathing became rapid and labored. The pharmacy sent an emergency
delivery of a laxative, but not the breathing medication. That finally
arrived eight hours after her admission and took a while to work.
The next day an aide came in to note that “he
seemed to be sleeping” and left. Then the nurse tried to place some
medication ordered for my mother’s mouth in her eyes instead. That
evening, the manager came by, noted our exhaustion, and sent us home
saying someone would check on my mother every hour that night.
Early the next morning a tearful nurse called to
tell me she hadn’t given my mother any of her ordered medications
overnight because she hadn’t known about them. We rushed to the nursing
facility where the staff was apologetic. Not long after, my mother died.
There’s
so much about this that’s hard to understand but little that’s unusual.
Our health care system is not really a system. It does a bad job of
coordinating transitions between clinical settings. Communication is
poor and inconsistent, and the CCRC was using paper charts. The nurses
had too many patients, and they were licensed practical nurses (LPNs),
who lacked the training that registered nurses (RNs) have.
We thought we could overcome these issues and did as
long as my mother was in our care. We managed to keep her comfortable
and at home until 42 hours before her death. But those last hours were
awful because of our decision to move her to the CCRC’s nursing
facility.
I have to live with that. My mother may have died badly because of it. The question is: How many more will?
Full Article & Source:
Dying badly despite all my efforts
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