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Hi. I posted 10 days ago stating my dad needed to move out of I dependent living ( just moved in) and into assisted. That has all changed. He is now in hospital with bladder cancer, they are trying to remove him from ventilator ( needed for his surgery procedure yesterday) him tomorrow , and he turning corner from septic shock, and has multiple other issues. He has been stating for a while he doesn’t want to live bc he hasn’t been well and I understand that. Im in Buffalo and he’s in Philly. His “ girlfriend” of 38 years just gave up on him last week ( the ride is t fun. Kw I guess) so it’s all crashing down. Anyway. I’m down with him now and Palliative care suggesting i move him to a skilled nursing facility by me and eventually he’ll need hospice. I have the places in mind but.. how will he get to me? And what if he’s not able to be transported ? I can’t leave him in Philly alone? Who do I reach out to to help me navigate this ? What else should I be doing? There are so many unknowns. And what do I do in the meantime? I don’t want to leave him in the hospital alone but he needs to be on antibiotics in hospital. for 6 more days. - im not sure I can keep missing work ?? I need some advice on how to manage this or who to turn to to talk through these kinds of things? Elder law ? ( I have power of attorney and a copy of his living will). Also - when I have to start doing things in his behalf, ( he just sold his house) is that power of attorney paper enogh if I have to do business transactions for him ( oe end a lease at his new apartment for example). Sorry for the crazy order of questions. Answer some or all. This all happened today. I drive down yesterday. Thx

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Palliative care should be able to guide you about medical transport for your dad. Ask them. Your POA should enable you to buy, sell, transact all business on dad’s behalf. Read it and it will outline your powers. You could probably leave him in Philly at the hospital alone as he gets the care he needs, but inform his doctors and other medical team that you have to leave and go back to work. Insist that they keep you informed and take the initiative in setting up various ways to reach you….email, text, phone etc. Make sure they all understand and will report to you every day. Make friends with his nurses and elicit sympathy, tell them you’ll be in touch regularly and ask them to be in touch with you. I’m so sorry for all these worries! Good luck.
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He states for a while that he does not want to live? When he comes off of that ventilator, request for that consult. He needs to be the driver of his health care. Why was he convinced for surgery and who Ok'd it.. you are asking for a complex transport that may cost a lot out of his pocket. Try to work with the hospital social worker on all of this before going to rehab.
Many people deal with care while still working. If you go back, deal on the phone. Sitting at dad's bedside is not very proactive if you are not physically doing something.
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"...Palliative care suggesting i move him to a skilled nursing facility by me and eventually he’ll need hospice. I have the places in mind but.. how will he get to me? And what if he’s not able to be transported ?"

From https://www.medicare.gov/coverage/ambulance-services :

"Ambulance services

Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance)covers ground ambulance transportation when traveling in any other vehicle could endanger your health, and you need medically necessary services from a:

- Hospital
- Critical access hospital
- Rural emergency hospital, or
- Skilled nursing facility

Medicare may pay for emergency ambulance transportation in an airplane or helicopter if you need immediate and rapid transport that ground transportation can’t provide.

In some cases, Medicare may pay for limited, medically necessary, non-emergency ambulance transportation if you have a written order from your doctor stating that the transportation is medically necessary."

Call a Medicare rep to see if his transport can be covered. See if you can get a written order from his doctor.
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Buffalogal Sep 2023
This is very helpful. Thank you so much!
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Do reach out to work. If you can afford leave without pay, they should allow this time.
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