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You didn't want this, you were not expecting it. A fast decline & departure can leave little time to adjust. Shock & anger are understandable.
Currently it seems your anger is directed at certain people. Maybe with the passing of time, you may view things slightly differently. Eventually finding acceptance.
Was your Dad's fall a severe one?
Any fracture or head strike?
Did he have illness or disease?
I hope you can find peace in this.
My mother’s doctor said that it is wise not to wait until the last minute to set up hospice care.
A nurse or doctor won’t suggest hospice unless it is truly needed. Hospice kept my mother comfortable in her last weeks of life. I was grateful for their support.
MOST people who enter Hospice do so b/c they are done with life--whether they're chosing this for themselves or their dr is reccomending it, and No, you can't just put someone in Hospice care without a dr's input.
As far as the eating.
Well, maybe dad appreciated a piece of candy, but feeding him candy when he wasn't eating or drinking anything else was nice of you, but in the end, pointless.
My MIL eats less than 400 calories a day and barely drinks. She not only RALLIED under this lack of nutrition, she's actually "FINE" acc to my DH. Well she's not, she still has dementia, she falls a lot and she's very mean to people, but she's not within days of dying. We think she will be here another year, very possibly.
A lawsuit will not make you feel better. It will not make you whole. Your dad was dying, and he did so, in his own time.
Both my father anf my FIL were on Hospice for >2 weeks when they died. The night before he died my FIL had a bowl of soup and conversed normally with us. 8 hrs later he was gone.
Daddy entered Hospice and went only about 2 weeks on popsicles and morphine. He died painlessy--and b/c he had suffered so much--we were grateful he went.
Right now you are angry and upset--take the time to mourn your mom and really think before you go 'legal'. My SIL is a med mal lawyer and she has said you wouldn't believe how very few cases really bring 'closure'. And it costs a fotune.
My condolences on your loss.
The addition of "candy" and "ensure" would have/could have prolonged death and agony by many days, sadly. And this can happen with a divided family.
Need, you are correct that if this OP needs to see an attorney to learn that she has no case here, she should; perhaps she will find finality in that. However, there are some (not likely many) unscrupulous attorneys who will take money from anyone to do anything. So I would simply caution her that if they ask for money for any suits she can rest assured they know they have no case and are simply robbing her of her cash.
It is a shame, and a sad thing that this we as humans have such a hard time with the fact that death does come to us all. And sad no to know that NO ONE is out there trying to kill our loved ones. We have these claims come to AC periodically. As an RN I find it truly disturbing.
Dad may not have eaten regular food. Sweets and Ensure are a different thing. Taste buds tend to go as we age but sweet and salt can still be tasted. You really should not have fed Dad. He could have been actively dying. Feeding can do more harm. You may have not been POA but you could have told the Nurse that Dad excepted food from you. So kind of wondering why they feel he won't eat. She may not have responded to you but you got ur point across.
I agree, you need to get all the records together. Maybe there is something u weren't told. So sorry for your loss.
You may very well be correct in your assessment of no malpractice. There are many possible reasons why a person would qualify for hospice care.
I do think the daughter would feel more at ease if she had answers to her questions though. At the very least I would hope that she could review his medical records. Hopefully, her stepmom will not mind her having access to the medical records.
You’re correct that there could be some friction between the wife and her stepdaughter. So, she is questioning her stepmother’s decisions. The wife has the right to do what she feels is best for her husband, regardless of what the daughter would choose for her dad.
Sometimes people are in denial of their family members being extremely ill when they are admitted into hospice.
I agree that hospice has their own criteria for their acceptance of patients.
It is interesting how hospice works. My oldest brother was in an end of life hospice facility. He improved so much that he was discharged. He ended up being able to do fairly well on his own for awhile.
The next time he went to the hospice facility he died shortly afterwards. This was in 2013. Things change in hospice care and other services as they are needed.
Before the Obama administration people fought with their insurance companies for coverage and were often denied if they had preexisting conditions. Their insurance policies didn’t cover their treatments. Changes were made and there is better coverage available now.
It’s important to keep up with all of the criteria, whether it’s insurance coverage or hospice care.
The wife in this case, clearly operating for her husband as his POA, clearly had Hospice come ON THE ORDER of an MD which is the only way hospice CAN COME.
Clearly there are problems between the wife and the daughter.
Certainly anyone can see an attorney, but this OP would be better advised in my opinion, to discuss this with hospice and the MD involved in the treatment of her father.
I am grateful to the admins for coming in to change the wording from "kill" to responsibility.
I would recommend that you follow Barb’s advice.
Wishing you peace as you go through grieving the loss of your father.
We have here "your version" in this story. Until and unless I can hear your Dad, his Wife, and his medical team speak, I will never have "their side". So no judgement.
I am very sorry for your loss and for your grief and I am very happy for your father that he has Hospice and a loving team to help him face his end of life. I would suspect that your feelings for your dad's wife, who is likely not your Mom, are not new? As Doctor Laura says, second marriages often are not a "blended family" but rather a messy salad.
I hope you will avail yourself now of Hospice and contact them for suggestions on grief counseling. I also know that if you speak with them about your questions you will be answered. I also know that as an experienced OT you realize that end of life care, the expectation that a person will pass in 6 months does not require a diagnosis of cancer or some other disease. It can be simple failure to thrive. It is ordered by an MD.
For myself, I decide an issue when I see such statements claiming that medical community or wives KILLED a person. That is, to me, a bit of hyperbolic semantics. I know you are grieving your loss. Grieving counselors suggest that often we use BLAME as a way to stop the need to pass into the more permanent state of grief. Blame suggests that "something could/would/should/might be done to prevent our loss. Grief recognizes that grief is upon us.
Again, I am so sorry for the loss of your father. I can assure you he will be with you forever in your heart and soul. If he was a fighter pilot in WW II I think he must have attained a good old age for himself. Celebrate him, his life, his love for you and all he was.
Just as a PS: I am currently reading the VSED Handbook by Kate Christie. Her mother chose voluntarily stopping eating and drinking as her final exit and she was so careful to get in an attorney, etc. to document her wishes and intentions, so that they could never be questioned by members of the family who did not agree with this exit. And there were some. A very short book full of information and I recommend it.
Since you weren't the POA, this may get very tedious and expensive for you. Take some breaths, try to gain some time for yourself to approach this calmly and effectively. I know that that may be very difficult, but for your own health and peace of mind, try to slow it down a bit.
Grief mixed with this sort of anger can be more devastating in the long run for you.
((HUG))
Request the medical records and see a MedMal lawyer.