Cant wait to get chastised...Why are we keeping elderly (with multiple problems) alive to live crappy lives? I find it selfish on families and the medical community, hospitals, etc. People are benefitting from the inevitable? We are more humane to our pets than our family. Not to mention how rich pharmaceutical companies have become (and doctors paid by them as well). How many drug commercials do you see every evening on television? I sure don't want someone keeping me alive in a nursing home!
You are not.
The elderly are kept alive in spite of having miserable, painful, horrible lives because they generate money. All old American people (age 65 and up) have Medicare and that is the real cash cow. The elderly of today usually have small assets too. Like real estate, insurance policies, savings, and small investments. The care industry wants it all. So some poor elderly person out of it with dementia and living a wretched existence in a nursing home must be kept alive at all costs.
The part that bothers me is that the healthcare industrial complex will let a young person die in the street if they can't afford good insurance. That's the real tragedy.
I'm sick of it as well. Years ago, people died around the age of 72 years old. Now, they are living well into the 100's. It's good if they have some semblance of life and can still function.
I had a client years ago who was mid-nineties who was tired of living. I still see that poor soul with their fists waving upward yelling to God; "Why won't you take me." This is the time that I wanted to leave homecare. I couldn't bear it. This person didn't live far from me, and I did not go into that neighborhood for almost two years after leaving that case. I had a friend who needed my help who lived in the neighborhood, and I had to tell her no. I didn't give a reason. I was just too traumatized at the time and didn't feel cut out to help anyone at that point. This particular client had traumatized so many aides that went into their home that many quit the agency after that one particular case. The primary care doctor was no help in prescribing medications to calm down their anxiety. It was just a horrible situation for the client and for the care aides being sent into this home. The client would self-medicate taking tylenol with codeine. Some days I would have to call a relative to come open the door to make sure the person was safe and hadn't fallen down the steps and broken their neck. One time it took me an hour to gain entry to their home.
I'm 67 and I've noticed some doctors trying these antics with me. I'm time enough for them. One doctor tried to talk me into going to the emergency room last week. It was late at night, and there was no way I was going to commute all the way downtown to the emergency room being exposed to who knows what risking cross contamination. My age would have worked against me, and they probably would have admitted me just to get the Medicare money. This particular practice has almost a two million dollar deficit that they are trying to close up.
Pardon all of my pronouns, but this forum is not private and questions come up in google.
I’m dealing with my 90 yo mom who is in rehab and has recently diagnosed pneumonia and on antibiotics. With her recent obvious decline (before she fell and broke her hip) I tried to get her to do a DNR with a loving explanation of why that’s a good idea. I also wanted her into hospice. She seemed on board but in swoops my brother who exerts a strong influence on her who also refuses to discuss a plan of care with me and is obviously in denial, who has helped make her a FULL CODE and of course won’t even discuss hospice. Unbelievable— but also heartbreaking. For her and him it’s largely driven by a mistaken sense of pride. She doesn’t even realize she’s setting herself up for living the rest of her days in misery, as her family sits and watches.
Now the handwriting is on the wall that she CANNOT go back to her home. She thinks she’s going home so all I did yesterday is kick the can down the road that she will have to stay longer. A SNF is definitely in her future and for what ???
So greedy corporations can continue adding to their bottom line.
I visited my 93 year old spinster aunt in a care home, she is wheelchair bound, has chronic kidney failure amongst many other ailments and has 12 medications a day to keep her alive including a sedative as she is slipping into aggressive dementia. In one of her most lucid moments she said she had been praying to die as the home had become an existence. 15 months earlier she was living on her own in sheltered accommodation, then she had a fall and broke her hip. She describes herself as an inmate in a prison and wants it all to end. I am the only relative visiting and have the farthest to come. Walking into that care home (which is actually lovely) depresses me to see so many just sitting in a chair with their chins on their chests all day except for mealtimes when they have to be fed by the staff.
I am now UK retirement age (66) and I can see my generation being the one where we start to get serious about our future needs. My neighbours are around my age and all of us do not want to go into any form of care home, we will make provision to remain in our homes for as long as we can with daily assistance. If we can't then I feel in my case that is the marker to say enough is enough.
Medical personnel are trained to save lives and repair injured bodies. They prescribe medications for just that, it is fully on an individual to decide if they want to take life prolonging medications or not or seek life saving intervention. It is unfair to put that on another human being.
My grandmother lived 12 years after a series of strokes, over 2 days, left her deep in the throws of dementia, she was not getting any life prolonging medications, yet her body kept on for more than a decade. That proves to me when it's our time; it's our time and nothing is going to change that, whether suicide or withholding live saving medications or treatments or pursuing full code.
For everyone that wants to get their paperwork in order when they get the diagnosis, I would caution you that you may be to late at that point. My grandmother was fine on Friday and on Monday she was not and never would be again. You should get the paperwork now while you can, waiting could put you exactly where you are trying to avoid being.
And down the road—a quicker road—the bill for that all comes due.
Medical Aid In Dying is a means by which a physician provides a prescription for a lethal dose of medication with which a person can end their life at their request. Some people call this physician-assisted suicide or assisted suicide.
Since you feel so strongly that elders shouldn't be living past their expiration dates, please flood your national and state lawmakers with requests to make MAID legal now. Either that or start stranding old people on ice floes. That works too.