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You say that Mom was acting very confused at home, and this, after her fall, is the reason for admission. This admission would be the time for family to tell the Hospital "Mom is here because she fell at home, and she has been very confused. This confusion is new for her". That would then entail an entire workup to rule out brain stroke/bleed, to rule out Acute Urinary Tract infection, and etc. To rule out new trans ischemic attacks (TIAs).
Do also know now that usually it is "Hospitalists" that take care of patients in Acute Hospital now. Not their regular physician. That is truly problematic. It is crucial that your Dad provide them all the information he can conceivably think of in order for them even to know which tests should be run. To hide any symptoms or to not acknowledge them as an acute change is to rob Mom of the care in diagnostics that she needs. Generally families are "desperate" to tell staff "This ISN"T MOM!! This is NEW. SOMETHING is TERRIBLY wrong". In absence of that sense of urgency exhibited by family staff may think that Mom is her normal self save for some blood pressure changes that caused a fall.
Who helped with admission intake? Who is health care POA? Who spoke with the doctors to explain that there is an acute new change, and ask to know possible reasons for it. I would say that what is unusual here would be that apparently in 9 days hospitalization no one mentioned this to staff or physicians? Or am I wrong? If they didn't, what would be the reason not to?
It is, yes, a very long time to be in for low blood pressure. Also it is a very long time to HAVE an abnormally low pressure if she is not on heart of BP meds that lower it. They could not release her with hypostatic low BP or she would keel and fall at once.
Remember, every patient enters as a mystery. The staff is TOTALLY DEPENDENT on the history on intake. If there is no family then they are left with what they see and hear, and there is no way for them to know if this is the patient's "norm" or an acute change. What changes? When? How manifested? Did they ever happen in past? What medications is she on?
I surely do hope your Mom is doing much better now. She likely should have a history and physical sheet to carry in future to explain recent tests, results, mentation, history of illnesses, known problems. This may help on future admissions.
There could be all kinds of things causing Moms confusion. Dehydration. Low potassium, low bood sugar and UTI. You have to tell everyone, that this is not normal. My husbands almost deaf and they never mention it to the next shift or does the next shift read his notes. Now Mom is home, have her evaluated by a neurologist. Do you see her often? They are good at "hiding" that things are not quite right. Dad could be covering for Mom too.
Right now, he's doing better. Not great, but better.
So, when my mom was in rehab after a stroke, she started acting loopy. Paranoia and delusions. I requested a psychiatric consult. A geriatric psychiatrist visited and diagnosed her with vascular dementia.
In my experience, you need to ask specifically for diagnostic tests; otherwise they will not be performed. It sounds as though your dad is being very protective of mom.
Who has healthcare poa?
Do you think perhaps the hospital thought your mom just had hospital delirium? What I have learned from my own experiences is that we really have to advocate for our loved ones in the hospital or things will be missed. We have to be persistent all the time. Medical professionals aren’t perfect.