The pain relief can be a problem. My mother had 2 kinds of cancer, both of which had metastasized. She was dying and was in a lot of pain. She went into hospice. First, my sister and I and my mother had to agree to a few things, one of which was that if she needed pain relief, she might need so much it could kill her. Fine, we welcomed that for her, all 3 of us did.I wouldn't. I hope if I ever get to the stage of having chronic pain that there would be a pill that relieved that pain. Emotional pain can be pretty stifling, but there's always another day until there is no more. The next day might be better.
It was a hypothetical scenario, but I guess unless I was in that position I really don't know what I'd do. I'm a retired nurse and seen a lot of patients in a position like your mother. When patients got to where there was nothing else to do that would help the patient, the doctors would usually order Morphine and Ativan and alternate them. That seemed to help some. I'd probably agree to that. I can't imagine what it would be like having to leave this world in excruciating pain.The pain relief can be a problem. My mother had 2 kinds of cancer, both of which had metastasized. She was dying and was in a lot of pain. She went into hospice. First, my sister and I and my mother had to agree to a few things, one of which was that if she needed pain relief, she might need so much it could kill her. Fine, we welcomed that for her, all 3 of us did.
So late the first night, her pain was enormous and I told the nurse she needed more morphine. The nurse demurred and I made her call the doctor to get more morphine. As I said, she was dying and had been for nearly a week at that point. She died around 4.30 a.m., and I am fairly certain the morphine killed her. Otherwise, she might have lasted another day or two being tortured with pain.
So, you may not take a pill in theory, but if the pain gets so bad you might agree to taking an overdose if that is what is required to relieve you of the pain. That's what my mother wanted, and my sister and I supported her in that.
Me either. It would be worse than awful.It was a hypothetical scenario, but I guess unless I was in that position I really don't know what I'd do. I'm a retired nurse and seen a lot of patients in a position like your mother. When patients got to where there was nothing else to do that would help the patient, the doctors would usually order Morphine and Ativan and alternate them. That seemed to help some. I'd probably agree to that. I can't imagine what it would be like having to leave this world in excruciating pain.
I was surprised when the hospice people said we had to agree to that in advance. I'm thinking that Georgia doesn't have one of those euthanasia laws for people, this can't be legal. Well, it's a work around, and it's a good one, as long as everyone agrees in advance. We had to sign paperwork. The docs can't guarantee that seriously needed pain relief will not kill a dying patient, in any case.It was a hypothetical scenario, but I guess unless I was in that position I really don't know what I'd do. I'm a retired nurse and seen a lot of patients in a position like your mother. When patients got to where there was nothing else to do that would help the patient, the doctors would usually order Morphine and Ativan and alternate them. That seemed to help some. I'd probably agree to that. I can't imagine what it would be like having to leave this world in excruciating pain.
Only the most zealous investigator would try to determine if a patient died from pain relief or with pain relief.The docs can't guarantee that seriously needed pain relief will not kill a dying patient, in any case.