I need some advice. My mother is 87 years old...has some dementia at times...has had quad-drouple bypass....stents...and a pace maker. Up until Feb 20th...she could do everything for herself...eat anything she wanted....didn't have any problems at all. (She lives with me). My sister exposed her to the flu...two days later I had to put her in the hospital....this was Feb 20th. While in the hospital...she developed C Diff. She has been on antibiotics since...couldn't get over it until this last week. During this time...she lost her appetite...nothing tasted good to her anymore. She has lost about 15 to 20 lbs in the past 2 1/2 months. She can't walk or even stand up any more...she is so weak. If she eats 2 spoons of food a day the last couple of weeks...that's a lot. She is literally starving to death. I feel if I can get some nutrition into her...she will overcome this. I've tried ensure...boost...she won't drink them. I have made arrangements to have a peg tube inserted this coming Monday. Am I doing the right thing? I feel it is the only chance she has. She says she doesn't want to die....I've begged her to eat and her reply is that she is eating...but she's not. Has anyone else experienced this with their parent?
Absolutely! You have my support to go for the feeding tube! Being an abuse survivor and having been forced into starvation, I know what starvation does, how it feels and what it does to the human body. This is why I seriously frown on Oregon for removing certain protections for mentally ill people as I saw online. This is just one example i'm trying to point out because starvation is not the answer and it doesn't solve any problems
In your particular case, definitely don't give her too much at once and make sure she's properly propped up or sitting up straight when you administer the nutritious liquid. Give her only small amounts at a time
This isn't really a shortcake receipe....it's for cobbler...(sub peaches...apples...etc) but I make this and when I serve it.(make up each serving individually in a bowl)....I I add a scope of ice cream on top...some fresh strawberries that I precut....in a container with suger & water and let set overnight in the refrig.....and COVER with whipped cream!!!! The good thing is I can serve just the cobbler with coffer or tea.....none goes to waste. Some times I just purchase the little "cake cups" which they keep in the fruit dept next to the strawberries...or I keep Sara Lee individually wrapped pound cake slices in the freezer....so when I say "homemade"....I mean I make it up as I go!!!!
The last two months of my Mom's life....I spent all of my time caring for her.....I was so busy doing it....I knew she was very close to the end of her life...But I don't think I realized that she was actually going to be "gone". .After she passed....I slowed down...and that's when it hit me...she wasn't here with me anymore. For weeks afterwards...I'd be doing something...look at the clock...and think..."It's time to give Mom her meds"...or...it's time to feed Mom"...or.."I better go check and see if Mom needs to be changed."....and then I'd remember that she wasn't here...I didn't know how much I was going to miss her. I joined a Grief Share Group....and last Tuesday 08/27...we had a candlelight service....I hadn't known how much I had been holding inside....I cried...for the first time since Mom passed....it all came out....I was sobbing. I'm still crying now whenever I think about her....but I'm getting through this. My client that lives in my home has been in rehab for the past two months....so I've had a lot of alone time to reflect back on everything. I truly don't have any regrets over any of the decisions I made concerning my Mom...I know I did the right things....but it was just her time. She never suffered...she looked beautiful through it all....and she went very peacefully with me holding her. I am at peace with myself. My client will be released this Sunday from rehab...and back home with me. I spoke with her daughter this evening.....she told me her Mom asked her to tell me that she wanted a salad....shrimp scampi with rice....and my homemade strawberry shortcake for supper Sunday....she hasn't had any of that since she's been in rehab and she misses it !!!! Of course... I'll make it all for her....I love to spoil all the people.... whose families entrust their loved ones... into my home and my care.....Again....Thank You...to everyone who took the time to write to me....sharing their experiences...and encouragement...and their condolences.... It meant a lot to me....knowing that people who didn't even know my Mom or me...cared. God Bless all of you....Florence...Angelscare.
Thanks for keeping us informed. Peace...
I feel I did everything I possibly could for her...I'm glad I decided to put the peg tube in...because I'll never have to wonder if she would have lived longer if I had or feel guilty thinking she passed be caused I didn't. I know the answer. Thanks to everyone who responded to me...and I hope my story can help someone else.
Spite was not good, or care about
Eating, he would prescribe a shot of
Wine for dinner and supper.
get one that tastes good, not a dry
One. The theory is that it cleans
The pallet. Several of the bigger
Hosp used it as a regular....it has
Fallen out of favor over the years
But still available....I have seen it
Work. A few months back a friend
Broke their hip, and in this nursing
Facility came they with a wine
Dispenser with cute little disposable
Cups.....oh by the way, they are associated
With Boston mass general, and their
Ger specialist, who are with "a leading
Medical" thinks the wine is ok.
Check with your state laws and then check with a physician.
Sometimes no longer eating is a person's only control over their own existence and since every creature on this planet literally eats to live and lives to eat...it is a consideration that often this is a clue they are ready to go.
Then there is the flip side as we see here...Angelcare's mom might very well be able to get the PEG properly removed (ie by a doctor and not a confused mind's directive to an obedient aging hand) and go on for many years eating on her own.
PEG tubes aren't meant to be long-term solutions but they can easily turn into that. And then you have to petition the courts (perhaps) to remove it because it has become 'life support.'
It is a case-by-case decision and unique just as everything else that is 'individual' is. That's why living wills are so important. Eliminating indecision, worry, and hopefully guilt and regret.
Good luck Angelscare...both with your mom's care and your relationship (and hers) with your sisters.
I know that you're strapped for cash. But the best way to guaranty that you have permanent control over mom is ..Guardianship via the court. Your mom's doctor will need to fill out a certificate about your mom's dementia and is no longer able to care for herself. You need to hire a lawyer and go thru the court. By doing this, your siblings cannot change guardianship. Just a thought since I've seen over and over on this site how one sibling was able to get a New POA over the hardworking, caring sibling/caregiver. It would be worth it to get the guardianship if you can.
I think too often today people only associate feeding tubes with living wills or directives and therefore think the issue of feeding tubes is an "end of life" decision...or if put in place, a useless "prolonging of life". Before feeding tubes got linked with the living will/directive world, they were developed and used as a treatment. Tubes can and are often recommended and used today not to extend ones life longer than need be, but to possibly help the person get over a mallady that the patient may very well not have control over. (such as dementia related issues) If given nourishment via a tube they may build their strength and progress to a normal life, quite possibly help them recover from the medical issue and return to what their life was previously.
Since so many people can not separate feeding tubes from living wills & end-of-life directives lets look at the premise at which those documents begin. 'You have been told by a medical professional that there is no hope for recovery/cure from an injury or illness'. IMO...if a doctor or doctors have said there's no hope, and/or if the patient has poor quality of living (a chore/struggle to live each day), and/or the patient says they want to go...then I don't think a feeding tube should be put in place. That would be prolonging life. But, if those things are not part of the circumstances, I don't think a feeding tube should be eliminated from consideration. Especially if recommended as treatment to help someone recover from an illness or injury.
Angelscare, who raised this topic and asked the initial question about feeding tubes...has not stated that her mother wants to die. Nor has she said that her mother is at death's door due to any illness. Her mother's biggest issue is lack of nourishment, which can be fatal if it goes on too long. While I was concerned about the risk of the actual procedure...I'm sure she and the doctors discussed it and must not have been overly concerned about her making it thru the procedure, or I think Angelscare would have mentioned that concern. She didn't. And as Angelscare's latest post explains, her mother's feeding tube was inserted this past Monday. The mother got through the procedure fine and is handling it fine...matter of act...sounds as though the mother is doing great: "...already she is totally alert...laughing....talking on the phone....and even asking for food....(she ate an orange....a pancake....and some M&M's and a cookie throughout the day!!!)." Now that the mother is eating she will hopefully build-up her strength and be able to stand and sit again and lead a routine and normal life...continue living happily it sounds...for who knows how long. The mother didn't know why her appetite waned. Sometimes she thought she had eaten...when actually she had not. Symptoms of dementia. Now with this help from her daughter and receiving nourishment, let nature takes its course. And let Angelscare have some peace of mind.
Good for you Angelscare!. I KNOW you did the right thing. You gave your mother a chance, instead of letting her wither away. You provided help and guidance for your mother when, due to her dementia, needed someone to take the lead and help her. I wish you and your mother many happy and fulfilling days ahead!
FYI...my mother, with early dementia and no catastrophic, life threatening illnesses, died two years ago. She, as with your mother, started eating less and less and then practically nothing. The food didn't taste good...she wasn't hungry...or she thought she had already eaten. This went on for several weeks. During her final two weeks, when she might have eaten a couple teaspoons of food a day,,she lost 20 pounds. Two days before she died, she was talking to me about having a big family dinner for Easter. Asking If I would help. She wasn't planning on dying. She was planning events with her grandchildren. Looking forward to spring's arrival. She didn't want to die. She had always been a strong woman. As long as I had been her daughter, rarely had I seen her ill, even with a cold or a headache. Nothing would keep her down. A fighter, who had gotten physically weak from a lack of nourishment, but her mind was still quite sharp. The last 24 hours of her life started as restless, then turned painful as her organs started shutting down. For comfort, Morphine was given, which knocked her out. And then...everything stopped.
Her death certificate said she died of "complications associated with dementia". She starved to death!!! That sounds so cold and heartless...evidently too crude to put on the death certificate...but it's reality. Three months later I found out that a feeding tube had been recommended by doctors but, unbeknownst to me, it had been denied by two members of my family who are emphatically opposed to the use of feeding tubes...period. I truly believe my mother did not have to die when she did. It was much more important for these selfish people to have their beliefs and misunderstandings honored than to help my mother with something she couldn't do for herself. If the roles were reversed...she would've moved mountains to help them in their time of need.
Feeding tubes are not the answer in some cases.Feeding tubes can be of assistance in some cases. IMO they are an option that should be weighed and considered for the circumstances...and not blindly and stubbornly eliminated from consideration.