My Mom just turned 91 and is a resident in a nursing home. Her laundry list of medical issues are being maintained by medication. She is bed ridden because she has severe arthritis in her back causing her constant pain. She’s being given medication to help keep the pain under control without having her completely out of it. Yesterday her social worker called me to tell me that in 2 weeks the staff and patients were going to begin getting the COVID vaccine. She wanted to know if I wanted my Mom to get the vaccine. Given my Mom’s age and she’s not in the best of health and she is now recently having anxiety attacks and had to be put on Xanax I’m honestly not sure what to do. Would it do more harm them good? Can someone please help me with this decision or give me advice? I’d appreciate any advice or knowledge. Thank you.
My husband is on Hospice, totally bed ridden and without any ADL's.He is in a board and care facility. He has been on Hospice for a year. I cannot take care of him as he is too big and totally unable to help. I was concerned with the issue a week or so ago and did some research but didn't find anything in relation to Hospice and COVID. I called his Hospice Nurse. She informed me that they don't give flue shots to Hospice patients and at that point didn't recommend this for him.
I am not concerned re side effects and if the situation were different would not question getting him the vaccine but there are other ethical questions involved. It will not help him. He has no quality of life and I do not want to make this harder.
I have discussed this with family and feel strongly that it would be better to give his doses to someone who needs it.
Last evening I got an email from his care facility saying that they were working with Wallgreens to get the shots. I am going to talk to Hospice again today and then email the home. At some point they may insist he have it for the safety of the others, which I understand.
This is such a dilemma - and I am so tired of making these awful decisions.
Hugs to all of you -- this is so hard.
Sandy L
Trust me. My husband is an epidemiologist who has worked in public health his whole career. My son is a physician in a large metropolitan hospital. You do not want to see what he has seen. He would get that vaccine in his eye if he could. The heartache of these dedicated and exhausted healthcare workers is overwhelming. Just vaccinating the nursing home workers is NOT enough. Every resident and visitor needs to be vaccinated. As a 2-time cancer survivor, I would get vaccinated tomorrow if it was available to me. Science is science. Trust it. All of you who are clapping and praising the front line Healthcare workers, then refusing to get your elderly loved one or yourself vaccinated, are just basically saying to them "FU". Again, sorry to be blunt, but this is a PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS. My physician son goes home at night and cries when he has to tell family members there just isn't anymore that could have been done. The anguish is daunting. Nurses holding up phones or tablets to their unconscious patients on ventilators so their family can say goodbye is agonizing. For all that is holy, get your loved one the vaccine.
Stop with the "mainstream media" crap. Stop getting your "news" from social media. If your not watching "main" stream media, what media are you watching? "Extreme" stream media? 300,000 Americans will have died this year of COVID-related symptoms alone. How many could have been saved by just wearing a simple mask? This isn't politics; it's science, plain and simple.
Yes, it is a health situation! It’s called a PANDEMIC!
It has NEVER been about RELIGION or POLITICS!
She is the person I will consult when the vaccine is more widely available. I for one will encourage Mum to get it, but after consulting the family member.
It is not likely that I will be eligible for the vaccine until the summer. I am content to wait, but I plan to take it when I can.
Areas of Expertise: Vaccines
Dr. Paul Offit is a member of the FDA panel that recommended releasing the vaccines to the public under emergency authorization.
https://www.chop.edu/centers-programs/vaccine-education-center/making-vaccines/prevent-covid?fbclid=IwAR3eDi1FXSUcGYNU_3lEQDnO3ZfKGbAAJQGrE4WVtCgLQb7jl7R4O1EXTs4
Infection means that a virus can infect a person’s cells and reproduce, but the person may or may not have symptoms or be contagious."
No matter how tempting it might be.
Although I didn't comment to your question directly, on Dec. 16th, I replied to JennaRose's post about my concern with my mom.
As of late last evening, I now find myself in the same exact position as you and I have to make the decision apparently by Monday.
My mom had COVID (per a POSITIVE test result) in April and although she survived she has been under hospice care until they discharged her yesterday telling me she will never walk again.
The email from her ALF's Administrator said there will be a Walgreen's Clinic administering "a" vaccine on Dec. 28th and that she will be contacting me Monday for either an "accept" or "decline" response. The email said they don't know "which" vaccine it will be and sent two attachments of information. One from the CDC and one from Walgreen's with what looks like a side effects etc. sheet (as I need to sit down and read each one thoroughly).
I guess I'm just upset that 1)I have to make a quick decision 2) I don't know which one she would be getting and 3) How does it work with someone who already has had COVID - is it necessary?
Currently, my husband is trying to do as much research as possible - I just don't want anything to go wrong after all we've been through to get her to this point!
I'm curious as whether or not after all the responses you've received, if you've been able to make any decision or at least come closer to making a decision as to how to handle it with your mom (my mom will be 96 in Feb.)?
Is this because of her recent cancer diagnosis or would she not get it anyway?
How is your mom doing?