How low can her O2 sats get before she needs readmitted to the hospital? Mom was in the hospital for 6 days with bacterial pneumonia, and released to transitional care because she was very weak and unable to go home. She has been there about 5 days now. Friday I thought she had turned a corner for the better, but tonight Monday I went in to see her and she was burning up with fever, not very alert and although she knew where she was, she was wasn't making much sense when she talked. I've seen her like that when she was overmedicated and sick...kind of like she was time traveling in her mind. She said her O2 sats had been 57 this morning! She is normally on 3 litres and stays around 88-95. Considering the pneumonia, I would expect her sats to be on the low end of that right now, but 57 is downright dangerous. They cranked her up to 6 liters and left her there all day, and her sat was 86 tonight on that. I had to round up the charge nurse to see what was going on, and he got the respiratory nurse to come in and assess her. I'm worried that her sats will go down again...shouldn't they have taken her to the ER or at the very least called me if it was that low? I'm worried that she'll have organ failure and brain damage if it gets that low again and no one notices. At least in the hospital she's monitored continuously and an alarm goes off when it gets low. I just wish I knew how much to expect of this facility, because I can't be there 24/7, obviously. She's feeling so awful, aches all over and can barely move...can't even turn herself over to her other side in the bed without help, and it seems she's getting worse instead of better. What's the best way to support her right now? The nurses are very nice and attentive when I ask for something for her, but I worry about when I'm not there.
Good wishes for your Mom Amicable Keep vigilant.
In the hospital, is she being seen by pulmonology?
I'm sorry you're both going through this. Please keep updating, thinking of you even though it doesn't help :(
My former neighbour-over-the-road, aged 86, has no bone density to speak of, advanced heart disease and is a nightmare patient. But my God she has a will of iron. When she needed IV antibiotics for her infected hip replacement she still would not stay in hospital - she had the district nurses coming to her house three times a day to check the cannula and administer the next drip feed. Maybe they just went along with it to spare the hospital staff from having her on the ward! - but it does go to show it can be done.
But clearly the main thing is that your mother is still unwell. I hope you find her improved at your next visit, please update.
Several years ago my mom was sent from hospital to TCU following a fall and was in renal failure due to dehydration and left unchecked over the weekend -TCU staff md is not anyone that I would choose or trust but more and more doctors don't visit facilities
Unfortunately you have to advocate on a near daily basis - it's draining physically and emotionally
Let us know how it goes