My dad is 85 years old living in a long-term care home. He has severe dementia, AFib, COPD, his kidneys do not function at 100%, and skin cancer. Now I just found out he has aneurysms in both legs. Doing a CT scan means injecting a dye that could lessen his kidney function. Doing surgery to remove the aneurysms is risky for his heart, COPD and dementia. Doing nothing risks the aneurysms rupturing causing heart failure or amputation.
As for you, please consult a psychiatrist (who can prescribe) who can help you let go..............it's the hardest choice to make, but he/she can help you deal with the 5 stages of grief. https://grief.com/the-five-stages-of-grief/
Hospitals just rush & you are a number on the system. Hospice treats people better at end of life & really home in with your dad's wishes. All the best & sending a hug
my Dad was in assisted living with my Mom and I was the POA and live near just my Mom now. Dad was going in and out of the hospital and in his mid 90’s we knew no drastic measures would be physically tolerated. He did not have dementia and he personally did not want intervention because he would suffer.
he eventually went on Palliative Care and his last 6 or son months were spent on Hospice. I personally pushed for that after his last hospitalization. He needed to be treated with IV Diuretics. It his his kidneys hard. He had to stay an extra 24 hours because his kidney function had dropped. He ended up going home and eventually ended up with oxygen. During the follow up by video with the cardiologist he told me that we needed to treat Dad conservatively with meds as he could not tolerate the only treatment he could receive which was the diuretics.
I truly understand where you are at right now because it gives you such a feeling of guilt but we have to do what we know in our heads and heart what we know is best for the one we care for. My Dad passed peacefully in his room where he wanted to pass and that gives me some measure of comfort.
I hope you have a caring team of health care providers who can help guide you in the right direction. Hugs to you, it is a tough place to be but you will do the right thing
Take care.
Disclaimer - I am not a medical professional nor do I profess to be able to advise you on such matters in regard to your father's health.
God bless and help you along this difficult road.
My 92 yo, demented father had cardiac valvular stenosis. The opportunity to perform a less invasive valve replacement was suggested. We chose not to do the procedure. He ended up declining, due to his dementia, fairly rapidly last year and passed away under hospice care. If he had received surgery, his limited time left would have been consumed by recovery in a rehab facility. Instead, he was able to be at home until the end.
Listen to that little voice in side your head. Mine hasn't lead me wrong.
Peace to you and whatever you decide.
Wife and I were in the eighties, both had knees problems
I had hip replaced, found out wife had dementia, we moved into an assisted living place, wife did not like but we had to,
she always wanted to go home but where she grew up as a youngster, she remembered past times but not what she ate that morning, scheduled a knee operation before the move but she cancelled the day before,
On driving before we moved she missed a turn two times, she got home and refused to drive anymore, I mentioned that she should keep up the driving she said if needed she could do,
was in pain and some time she asked if it was ok to wish to die, once I told it was ok, she got more relaxed, after a few months she was under care of hospice care then after we assured that it was ok to wish to die, she stopped eating, hospice people were very caring, did a wonderful job, She passed away in the morning while our daughter was singing Do Not Be Afraid, and I was holding her hand, they said that the sense of hearing is the last thing we loose.
We were married 62 years, she was a good mother to our four children and a very good wife, I do mis her very much,
after I said it was ok to wish to die she got more peacefull, I hope to be able to see her soon.
You're asking for an opinion on what is a heart-breaking decision. Here is mine.
At your father's time of life and with all of his serious health problems, he shouldn't have to be put through more tests and procedures.
Is he in pain? I think the goal now should be quality of life not prolonging his misery.
You say he has severe dementia along with all his other health problems, is elderly and lives in a care facility. He has no quality of life. Putting him through tests and procedures is not going to improve his life and health. It may even make it worse.
Let him pass into God's mercy. This is what I think is best.
You take him out of the nh, that means taking him away from his surroundings and any staff or residents he has bonded to. Should he be in hospital for even a week and a half, he could forget all about them, reintroducing the usually negative period elders have in entering a nh in the first place. That is if the nah doesn’t just make his bed available for the next patient.
So, ok, he is living, but now comes an adjustment period that may be worse as his dementia has progressed. If he has any quality of life where he is, best to keep him where he is.