My mother developed aspiration pneumonia in the nursing home and was taken to the hospital. I OK’d the use of antibiotics but now that she is back at the home, we have had to have hospice step in. She is not responsive, not eating, taking in very little liquid (a tsp a few times a day) and no more antibiotics. She is on Morphine now. It was a shock to me that they can so matter of factly predict her death. It seems so cold to me. She turns 93 tomorrow. I feel on the cusp of breaking down. I’ve been through the death of so many— family, son, husband, but they were sudden. This drawn out suffering is so difficult to watch. OK, maybe on morphine, she is not suffering? How do you even know? I seem to be the only one that even noticed she occasionally stops breathing. I called it to their attention at the home and it was, "Oh! Well, we will start counting her breaths." She is transitioning, they said. Even before she was taken to the hospital I was the only one that insisted something wasn’t ‘right’. They finally decided I was right and called for an ambulance. Why am I the only one noticing these things!!??
How long can my mother live like this?
That is my question of the day.
Morphine is given to both assist in breathing and to medicate a patient to a level below the level at which we feel pain, even below the level of breathing, so that the bodies seeming struggles for breath and so on are not felt by the patient. That's the blessing of hospice. While hospice medication may mean an earlier death by some minutes, hours, even days, or not can't be known, but there certainly is less struggle for the person.
I am sorry for your loss. No matter the number of year, the amount of a good life, it is still painful to lose those we love and we all grieve differently. Only time can heal our loss and make our memories fond and happy rather than sad.
Continue to speak with Hospice. They are generally very good to answer questions. If they tell you things like "She is transitioning" then ask them to explain to you how they evaluate these things scientifically.
For myself as a nurse I am grateful you have given your Mom this relatively peaceful death; I hope in time you will recognize the great gift this is.
As to how long your Mom can go on like this, that is as individual to her as her own thumbprint is. No one can be certain; we read the signs we have learned and we make "educated guesses" and that doesn't really address grief and loss.
I wish you the best. I feel my Mom and Dad with me throughout my life, and I am 80, still seeing the world through their lives, still celebrating them. Your Mom will be with you always while you live. I know that doesn't address the grief; allow yourself this grief, for a life is worth grieving as it passes. Your Hospice can guide you in seeking grieving support and health ongoing. Their job doesn't end at the end of your Mom's life. They will contact you. Ask them for support.
My present LO has been “on hospice” for over a year. She was placed on hospice because her level of care warranted it.
My mother was placed on hospice when she began to refuse food or water, and soon afterward lapsed into agitated semi consciousness and then morphine was administered.
No morphine so far with my current LO. She is peaceful and relaxed, in spite of general physical deterioration.
I am totally in sync with your question. Those of us who love her expect “the call” at any time, painful to us for sure. Sometimes it seems as though nothing is easy in this world.
Hope it helps just a little for you to know that even if your question can’t be answered, at least it can be compassionately shared and u derstood.
"she is not responsive, not eating, taking in very little liquid" this means her body is shutting down. The antibiotics were stopped because once on Hospice no life prolonging medication is given. Hospice is for comfort. Morphine is given for pain and ease of breathing. Aspiration pneumonia is caused by not being able to swallow correctly. The food and liquids go into the lungs causing pneumonia. Not being able to swallow can be a sign of the body shutting down.
Why do you notice these things and no one else seems to...I have no answer to it. Why when my Mom was in the Hospital with a UTI was she sitting up and talking one day and the next she couldn't eat her breakfast because she was out of it, why didn't someone notice that. Why didn't the nurse coming on duty after 2 days off read Moms chart and think "this woman can't be released today because she has done a 180." This nurse actually asked me what I thought she should do and I told her call the doctor and tell him Mom has done a 180 and in no way can be released. It was found Moms antibiotic had penicillin in it she was allergic to which was in the Hospital records.
You Mom is 93, her body is giving out and it is a long process. Mom started shutting down 2 weeks before her death. I suggest you don't sit with her all the time. Get out of the room. Go home to rest. Because...you may go to the bathroom and when u come back they are gone. With my Mom it was bringing my nephew to visit. We sat with her for a while. He held her hand and talked to her. I sang her favorite hymn. We left at 1:30 pm. She was pronounced at 1:50pm. Nurse asked if nephew was the last one to say goodbye, I said yes. She said she sees it all the time, they wait for that one person that hasn't said goodbye and when they get there or hear their voice, they pass.
Take this time to tell Mom you love her and you appreciate everything she did for you. Tell her is allright to let go, you will be fine. If she has faith in the hereafter, tell her she is going to a better place.
They are half on the other side and half here, when they're transitioning, is what's happening. I've heard the hospice nurses tell me that twice now, when mom was dying and when dad was dying. We are struggling more than they are, by listening to their breathing and watching their every movement. I remember when my father was transitioning. I was looking at my watch and timing how long it was between breaths.......and I was holding MY breath waiting for him to take his next breath. Needless to say, I was about ready to collapse by the end of his journey myself. When my mom passed in February, I was more familiar with the mechanisms of the end of life journey, so instead of looking at my watch & holding my breath, I was rubbing her arm and speaking to her about how much I loved her and what a great life she'd led instead. I spoke loudly enough to drown out any struggled breathing sounds she was making. I knew that her soul had already transitioned to the other side to be with her family members who had all passed long before her.
I think we daughters know our parents best, which is why we can tell when something about them is 'off' a lot quicker than the staff can in the SNF or the Memory Care. I was practically begging hospice to take mom on before they actually agreed to, b/c I KNEW she was approaching the end of her life, even though hospice insisted she 'wasn't ready' yet in November. Meanwhile, she passed in February, meaning she sure WAS 'ready' in November!! It would behoove the 'experts' to listen to the family members more often than they DO, wouldn't it?
I'm sorry you are going through such a gut wrenching experience with your mom. I know how difficult this truly is, no matter what anyone else has to say on the subject. I also know that your mother will soon be at perfect peace, if she's not already, and for that you can rejoice and know that her suffering here on earth is over. For that I was extremely grateful on behalf of both of my parents; dad who had an aggressive brain tumor, and mom who had advanced dementia, CHF and several cases of pneumonia herself (one of which was aspiration pneumonia).
Sending you a hug & a prayer for peace.
Mom isn't suffering, but you are. This is exhausting for her but should not be painful. It's just very hard for her to breathe, much less talk and move. Yes, it is hard to watch but it also gives you the time to talk to her, sing to her (if you are so inclined), confide in her, anything that will give you both peace.
She may also be very worried about leaving you. If you know she can't recover, she might need to be told that you will be OK and she can move on. Even if it isn't true it would be appropriate to tell her if you think this is the case. I had to tell this to Dad, and promise him I would take care of Mom. Then I kissed him goodbye and watched while he slowly took his final breaths.
The medical professionals are not always right, but are speaking based on statistics and their experiences.
The morphine will keep her comfortable physiologically and emotionally.
i am sorry for your pain. Stay near her if you can. Talk to her while you can. Even if she is not fully aware, you will be glad that you were nearby.
What a miserable disease. Thank God for the many great Hospice employees and all the good they do. They see death and dying and help us through that final journey. Only God knows exactly when.
My mom died almost a week ago at age 96. Her ALF had recommended hospice about a month ago while she was still more or less ambulatory. She'd fallen a few times and was wandering some. Within a short time, she went sharply downhill, then within a week it was more like off a cliff. I got the call that she was transitioning and that it would be 2 or 3 days. It ended up being 4.
I've been through these several-days' transitions twice before, which really prepared me for what I experienced with my mother. The gasping breaths and the "wet" sounds made it sound like she was suffocating or drowning, and were hard to listen to at times. But because I'd seen this before, I knew it was part of the process of letting go and I was more able to roll with it. She had to do that work, and I'm enormously grateful that I could be there to help her with it: make sure all comfort measures were fully taken care of, talk to her, tell her I love her and that everything is okay, she doesn't have anything to do but rest, and hold her hand.
There are some specific signs that are very reliable indicators that the body and brain are unraveling. Hospice workers see it all the time, that's what they do for a living. I hope their delivery of this news was not what was "cold" - that would be unusual but not unprecedented. If the person speaking to you was uncompassionate, it might be worth letting the director know. The person might have compassion fatigue or be going through a personal difficulty, and need a break.
Shari49, I hope you're able to find comfort in some of these responses, whatever the current situation is. Grieving can start even before the loved one has passed; I hope you have plenty of support.
The third sentence in the 4th paragraph was how the hospital was to me. The guy who was in charge of the ICU when my mom was there mentioned she was "dead" as soon as she was readmitted, then " acted like a giddy school girl", when the decision was made to disconnect life support and let her go
He was so "enthusiastic".the Hospice Doctor told him to leave .
What do you want for your mother?
Other signs death is probably near, are cold limbs (fingers, arms, legs) and cyanosis ( blue purple color of extremeties, fingers, toes). This means oxygen is not getting to these parts. Also, decrease in urine,. Which can mean kidneys are shutting down.
, the mortician had taken her AND she had been picked up by the medical research firm that she had specified . So no opportunity for me to say goodbye though I had visited just that week , to no response from her. I have been told that she did actually have some coherent times but not when I was there. This haunts me and I feel that Hospice is at least partially responsible . They should have been aware that one child was not within short travel and not have given so much morphine . I can NEVER get that back . Yes I told her I loved her that last visit but I was not “saying a last goodbye . I think often giving of these medications is mostly a way of putting these elderly to sleep just a slower form or how they do for pets
theres no hope. Only loss. No “we’ll do” … only goodbye.
but these are the things WE face . Not the other person.
keep in mind your mother may be able to hear you, just not able to respond.
so talk to her about good memories of times together. Tell her before you touch her so she’s not startled. Kiss her goodnight and tell her youre going to bed. Tell her … anytime … that you love her.
After she survived a terribly long bout of COVID in 2020, I prayed that I’d be able to hug her and tell her that I loved her “…..just one more time”.
I was granted my prayer, and many times since I have said the words just as I’d longed to say them. She’d respond “You’d better!”.
As she becomes more frail I continue to end my visits in the same way.
“You’d better!” is said less and less often, frequently in a scarcely intelligible whisper.
When I visited this last Monday I found her in the day room, watching and listening as a couple of the aides were dancing to an exercise video. She seemed to be enjoying the music.
As I got up to leave her I repeated “I love you dearly!”.
Her response came not in a whisper but in the old familiar voice-
“YOU’D BETTER!”.
A gift that I hope I deserve.
Hospice can be cold and unfeeling. Once a person passes, they go away.
this forum has been invaluable to me, and will be, I’m sure, with my 97 yr old stubborn MIL I also care for.
Blessings to all
They are symptoms commonly seen just prior to death... including the irregular breathing. The purpose of hospice is to ease the dying process when death is imminent and unavoidable.
Morphine is given to the dying primarily to ease respiration (as well as for pain). Hospice should have explained that to you.
One is hardly ever willing to say a final goodbye to ones mother, ...no matter what her age. I'm so sorry to hear what you are going through.
Hospice will stay as long as needed. NO time limit. And they should be explaining to you the purpose of their care (comfort when cure is not possible) and emotional support for you at a difficult and often confusing time.
My condolences.
I know it is a comfort to know she is with those that have gone before.
May The Lord give you grieving mercies, strength and comfort during this new season in your life
Your mom is at peace