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| Mom on Christmas 1984. She hated getting her picture taken, and this is one of the rare ones where she's smiling. |
During
the past nine years, I’ve shared bits and pieces of the last days that my mom
was alive, but I don’t think I ever told the whole story. I dug it out from my
journal and here it finally is.
Sunday,
January 15, 2017, we brought Mom over for lunch with a few of Hubby's family
members. My mom and his mom had a good visit, and it was a good day.
The
next day, Monday, the 16th, Mom called me at noon to tell me that she was
vomiting and felt weaker than usual. She sounded horrible, so I told her to see
if my brother could take her to the ER, and if not, she should call 911.
My
brother brought her into the ER, and they checked her over. The only thing
wrong with her tests was that her calcium was elevated. The ER doctor told her
to stop her calcium supplement and sent her home.
I
left work a little early, took her home, and tried to get her to eat something.
She wanted a hamburger from McDonald's, so I ran and got one and picked up the
Zofran script the ER doc had sent in. She threw up the hamburger, so I gave her
a Zofran and stayed until she got ready for bed. Then, I stopped to see her the
next two nights, until she came in to see her regular doctor for a recheck on
Thursday.
She
still looked pretty crummy on Thursday, just as weak, still a little nauseated,
and getting confused. She was also dehydrated by then, so her doctor admitted
her for IV fluids and observation.
She
did okay over the weekend, but never really got much strength back, so on
Monday, the 23rd, they sent her to the nursing home for rehab.
She
did all right in the nursing home, had good days and bad days. Griped about a
lot of stuff (the food, the staff, the other residents) to my sister and me,
but she remained sweet as pie to everyone else, which has been her modus
operandi for a long time.
Then
on Monday, February 6, her insurance company gave her the final heave-ho; they
were kicking her out on Thursday. We got home health set up to do an eval,
ordered the Lifeline, and made an appointment with ADRC. I planned on staying with her for the
weekend to make sure she didn't fall, that she was
eating, and that she was doing okay.
By
the next morning, she had decided that this wasn't going to work; she wanted to
go back to the nursing home. She was just so weak and frail. She'd also been
having pain in her hip, and it was getting worse. She had been taking Tylenol
or Tramadol as needed, but I started giving it to her on a schedule, so that
the pain didn't escalate.
Oh,
and her little arthritic fingers were not strong enough to push the Lifeline
button if she needed to, so there was no way she could stay home alone at all.
The
home health nurse came on Saturday to see what they could offer, but they
agreed she couldn't stay home without 24/7 care. I called the nursing home, but
because it was the weekend, they couldn't admit her until Monday.
I
stayed with her over the weekend, with my brother or sister relieving me for
about four hours each day, so I could come home, unwind, take a shower, and try
to get a quick nap in my own bed. I'd been trying to sleep on Mom's loveseat,
and she also keeps her apartment at 85 degrees, so no matter how hard I tried
to get comfortable, it wasn't happening.
Monday
morning, she was in more pain, and she clearly had an infection in one of her
fingers. It was a challenge, and I tried not to push her, but we finally made
it to the nursing home by ten, when they were expecting us.
She
got through that day and the next. But by Wednesday morning, the nursing home
called to say the finger was even more swollen and was turning black. I told
them to send her to the clinic, and her doctor would work her in, because
that's what happens when your daughter works for your doctor.
When
he went in to see her, I handed him hospital admission orders and told him she
needed to be admitted. As soon as he saw her, he agreed. But because of
paperwork and stupid computers, it was another hour before I wheeled her over
to the hospital and helped the nurse there clean her up and settle her in bed.
Two
hours later, my doctor came out of his office and told me, "The hospital
just called." He paused. "Your mom just passed away." He was more shocked than I was. I saw this coming.
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| Hubby snuck this picture of Mom and me when she was in the hospital on Jan 22. |