I took my mom for an assessment on her walking on Monday at the ER, per her Dr.'s orders. She was admitted that night for PT assessment on Tuesday. She was cognitive, very aware and ate well. Wednesday I got a call saying my mom was in ICU. As she was getting her breakfast the nurse said her head dropped and she was incoherent. They did an MRI because they thought she had a stroke. That was negative. They have done CT Scans and an EEG. They're still looking over the EEG, and tomorrow they might do a lumbar puncture. Her numbers are perfect. Her doctors are "baffled." The ICU doctor is trying to persuade me to sign a DNR. I will not do this until I get an answer why this suddenly happened. She did know who me and my brother, sister in law and husband were. She was able to say our names, but everything else was gibberish. But she would continually make noises and turn her head back and forth. I am so confused and broken hearted. Has anyone else experienced such a thing. I am POA.
Please get a consult from a medical malpractice attorney. They all give a free consult and they may take the case on a contingency basis. Contingency means you pay not money unless the attorney wins.
My own father had a similar situation. It turned out after hiring a malpractice attorney who was able to get his records, that they had given him a strong medication that interacted with other medications that he was on.
This is clearly malpractice. My attorney prevailed and was able to win a $3 million lawsuit.
My dad recovered but was further disabled due to this error. His last year of life was miserable because of this error.
Some drugs can also cause a stroke if administered improperly.
If more people would file lawsuits, all doctors and nurses would be more careful before administering drugs.
Do not feel greedy for suing. If you sue, you will be doing many other patients a favor because the entire staff of the hospital will finally be exposed to outside scrutiny
If they did nothing wrong that will also be a relief to you.
I hope all will be well for your mom, and for you. I know it is very difficult.
When I arrived in Austin 3 hours later, he was in ICU and breathing on his own! I expected to arrive and find him on a ventilator and have to make the decision to disconnect him. The pulmonologist explained to me that intubation is recommended to the elderly if there is NOT a cardiac event. The DNR is for a cardiac event and resuscinating an elderly person...especially a frail person with the problems my husband has...generally results in significant loss of mental abilities because there is a lack of oxygen to the brain. If there is no loss of heart beat in a respiratory failure, the brain is continuing to receive oxygen and, therefore, the intubation can result in a good outcome.
It did turn out to be the "right" thing to do for my husband. Although he was very ill and developed heart failure and pulmonary hypertension during his 3 week hospitalization, he is "almost" back to his pre-illness status. It was a difficult battle getting him back, but I'm glad he is here. He still has the ability to dress himself...some times he needs reminders; he remembers who I am; he still has "old" memories we share (short term memory very bad); he feeds himself, brushes his teeth and showers (with a small amount of help). So, he still has a quality of life.
When he was in the hospital, he was very confused and disoriented...after months of recovery, he knows he is at home and finds his way to the bathroom, bedroom, living room and kitchen.
I hope this information on my husband's experience will help you as you struggle with your mom's situation. I hope she is recovering and all is well for her now.
I am sure you are as frustrated as your mother. I have to thoughts on this situation. In all my years of working with seniors, I have never heard of the POA signing this document. I would say contact your local Area Aging on Aging (county office) or contacting National Senior Citizen Legal Services, (NSCLS)www.justiceinaging.com. Both can help without charging. I have no idea where you live but I am sure either of these can help. Next, did your Mom have any surgery or care that would require her to be sedated. My experience has found a common drug for sedation in older people is Versad. I am not a medical doctor and not pretending to be. I have several clients over the last few years in which this drug was used for older people. The outcome was not good initially, for some reason this drug causes much of what you have described in senior citizens. Finally I got a doctor to tell me that for unknown reasons 'Versad does this to many older people'. The good news all of my clients did improve back to baseline, although it was a lengthy process.
I hope this will help a little. I know you are looking for answers, perhaps this has helped.
I'm curious where you are located? Doing a physical therapy evaluation as an inpatient? The rest of us would have it in the home or in living facility. PS If this admission is for an inpatient stay in order for mom to qualify for skilled nursing care which requires a three day hospital stay, be sure her status hasn't been changed to observation. If the stay is less than 3 days or for "observation " rather than an admission, Medicare won't pay for skilled nursing facility care for rehab etc. Check it out before she is moved.
I am so sorry that this is happening to you & your mom. I just got back from spending 5 days & nights at the hospital for my mom who had chest pains & a cough. I would definitely check on what medications & what they have been doing with her. If she is alone at the hospital anything could have happened. It is strange that they kept her overnight for a PT eval., while I was at the hospital with my mom I had to stop the nurse from giving her the wrong meds, stop the doctor from giving her a blood transfusion to pep her up, she was given every lab test under the sun with med techs taking blood every 6 hours even at 2:30 in the morning & trying to take blood while she was sleeping. Her roommate kept yelling all day & night & died expectantly after one of the blood transfusions & the daughter was so upset that they wouldn't do anything because of the DNR. My advice is if possible bring in another doctor, check the meds ( on another occasion my mother was given morphine without my knowing it because she said that she hurt from head to toe- she ended up in Intensive Care & it took a day or two for her to respond- when I asked the nurse that I wanted to know what drugs she had been given - the pharmacist came & talked to me about how she shouldn't have been given morphine because of her age etc. Check about the UTI & even think about changing hospitals. Giving a lumbar puncture, etc. seems like they are on a fishing expedition, talk to your physician or bring in one from another hospital to review her records before doing anything extreme. I once made an appointment with an Orthopedic Surgeon to discuss her case & he actually went to the hospital for free to review her case. I will keep you and your family in my prayers. Hope she is better!
One side that antipsychotics can cause is dysphagia (difficulty swallowing, and even talking). I would want to leave no stone unturned. Definitely check the possibility of a UTI.
Among common antipsychotics are risperdal, haldol (the decanoate form is the most dangerous), and seroquel. Please be advised that this is not an exhaustive list.