absolutely! I would never send them to the hospital or nursing home that is just cruel. I see it like this...my loved one sacrificed many times in there life for me and now it is my turn to sacrifice just a small part of my life for them.
My family means the world to me and it would be selfish of me to just shove them in a home or hospital because i couldn't handle it. I just had to choke it up and make myself strong.
There are also many sources that provide help and support for you and your loved one. hospice is wonderful and will help every step of the way.
2006-06-15 08:25:59
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answer #1
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answered by AzzGoodAzzItGetz 4
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There is certainly a place for good home hospice care. The exception would be when hospital treatment would be needed for pain management. A neighbor of mine had metastasized breast cancer and was in horrible pain. She was receiving home hospice care since her elderly parents couldn't make regular trips to the city for hospital or nursing home visits & wanted to spend as much time as possible w/her. This was out in the country where the hospice nurse could only come around a couple of times a week. She died in horrible pain because her selfish parents couldn't stand to let her die out of their company.
2006-06-15 08:38:59
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answer #2
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answered by Taffy Saltwater 6
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It's not just a question of having the strength to have them at home. Is there someone who can meet their needs 24/7? Can they feed them, toilet them, bathe them, counsel them and love them without considering them a burden?
Can they provide good enough pain relief for them? The most important thing is to provide comfort for them until the end.
I am an RN in a nursing home. Sometimes the choice is not always what the patient wants but how best to meet their needs. Just because you choose to go to a nursing home or hospice house does not mean you won't have access to your loved one at all times. We are open 24/7 to meet the needs of all persons involved in the care of a loved one.
Think of all the possibilities first. Then go from there.
2006-06-15 09:22:25
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answer #3
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answered by Nancy L 4
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i'm in that difficulty suited now. My dad made his desires very sparkling that he's to no longer pass to the well being facility, or the different facility back, and we are able to abide by his desires. there is truly no longer something which could be completed to postpone his existence at this component, so protecting him mushy is all we are able to do. mom is his considerable care giver, yet residing house well being and hospice care has been so dazzling and supportive for no longer purely my mom and dad, yet for us little ones as properly. A hospice nurse comes each and every couple of days and an aide comes each and every morning to grant dad a tub and get him dressed. In an emergency, the hospice nurse is a telephone call and approximately ten minutes away. I take a seat with dad two times each and every week minimum on an identical time as mom gets out and seems after the procuring and have some outing of the residing house. Dad can not be left by myself. final week on an identical time as i became sitting with dad he wakened and thought of like he became in super soreness and his respiratory became very atypical. Later that night the nurse had to be called to the residing house because of the fact dad became having severe chest pains. the next day is my day to take a seat down with dad back and mom and that i'll pass over classes. My dad will die at residing house, and that i think of it is going to likely be very, very quickly. Parkinson's ailment is a sluggish and terrible loss of existence.
2016-12-08 09:26:53
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I recall when I once began bleeding heavily, non stop through every part of my upper body - nose, mouth, throat ( I had cancer in its final stages ), I woke up to find my entire family - my mother, my brothers, my two teen aged sons, aunts and uncles by my bed side. My wife was shattered and so my mum broke the news that the doctors had given up all hope of my pulling through. I then requested if I could be taken home so that I could die in my own bed and was granted that wish. Somehow, death was not to be and my bleeding stopped as I reached home. I feel that the surroundings too make a difference for the dying and their last wishes must be accepted and given into.
2006-06-15 16:35:19
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answer #5
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answered by livingonthinice 3
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I had to face this with a relative who wished to die at home. He received hospice care and I was sitting with him (along with my aunt, grandma, and mother) when he passed away. It's hard but it was what he wanted so we did it.
2006-06-15 08:19:31
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answer #6
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answered by Candice H 4
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A person has the right to choose the place where they die, in my opinion. It is up to those who love them to rise to the occassion. It is the saddest thing to have someone who wishes to die at home stay in hospital because their family is scared...very sad.
2006-06-15 08:23:03
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answer #7
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answered by Midwife Jane 4
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It might be better for that to happen. You would want your loved one to enjoy the last of their life as much as possible. Being in a hospital is no way to enjoy the last of your life. I know its a bit creepy to have somebody die in your house, but you won't feel guilty about forcing them to stay in a hospital their last days.
2006-06-15 08:20:03
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Call Hospice. This is what they do. They will help you and your loved one.
2006-06-15 08:19:00
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes - I would want to be with them, and if their wishes are to be comfortable at home with the ones they love than that is what I would want to do for them.
2006-06-15 08:18:39
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answer #10
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answered by geo1985 2
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