He has a surgical consult this month. He is 67 and with Dementia, newly diagnosed. In anyone's opinion should he continue with the surgery? If he does not have surgery he will continue on with his pain meds for the rest of his life and as now they are not doing their job because he has been taking them for about 6 years for other pain issues as well. Thanks.P.S. Will the anesthesia hasten his Dementia ?
Be candid with the surgeon. What are the chances of success with full and cooperative rehab? What are the chances if there is no effort at rehab?
Hugs to you! This is definitely Not Easy!
Your DH will probably need outpatient rehab. i had to choose NH/Rehab because Mom would not do her exercises at all if the PT/OT person wasn't physically there to make her do them. i tried everything - doing them with her, trying to make it fun.... nothing worked. She just did not want to do them.
i cannot lift up my Mom, and she's not able to push up on her elbow to get out of bed [bought a bedrail that she could pull on]. i had to remodel the bathroom - grab bars, shower seat, etc. The car required modification: a grabber to get in, a gel seat to help her get onto the seat, a walker, and a rollator.
May i please suggestion, BEFORE scheduling surgery -- please make sure the Trust or Will or whatever documents are completely up to date. Make sure there's a provision for "future medical care" ... i wish there were something in Mom's legal papers for a "Disability Trust" that would have isolated part of her assets. i live with Mom, but as a daughter, i'm not entitled to what a spouse would [i.e., preservation of 50% for household expenses, and yet the house is left to the Trust, and i am to live in the house until i die. If i sell, the proceeds go to the Trust and two sibs. Mom became stubborn after surgery, resenting signing any documents that we were working on before her surgery. But you'll definitely need DPOA, DPOM, HIPPAA and ... well, the other day, the psychologist suggested i file for guardianship. WHAT? All of this since 7/20/15? What kind of fast train is going on...... i really wish we'd gone to an Elder Care Attorney -- a different attorney than the one who drew up her trust. Elder Care Attorneys plan for the inevitable issues that develop when HEALTH and LIVING locations and asset protection become so very paramount. It's not only probate to watch out for -- but the horrific increase in medical expenses - whether at home, or in a facility. Mom was hospitalized for 9 days after experiencing a UTI and bed sores, which occurred at the facility --- it cost $102 a day to "save her room." We just aren't prepared for this ... so please, have a very frank discussion with an elder care attorney. You do not have to turn over management of any monies, stocks, bonds, pennies in the sofa, if you do not want to. You may be better off not since your cost basis would change. Most states have a 5-year look back period of assets [to see if anything untoward/ unusual has occurred in the balance sheet of assets - like 'hiding money' so as to qualify for assistance. You may want to look at any life insurance policies to see if any funds would potentially be available for long term care.
i want my mom home. i need her home. i keep praying it will still be my choice. There still is so much paperwork/retitling of assets to be done, and altho i'm not to benefit, it needs to be done, for the safeguarding of her assets and home. i could be in an accident tomorrow - especially the way people eat/text/talk on cell phones while they drive, etc.
Yes, it is a painful recovery. But there is no way she'd have been able to "suffer it out" - her arm was visibly 2-3" below her collar bone. Part of her collar bone was replaced with plastic.
With the pain, the meds, the rehab -- her appetite deteriorated: it takes 2 aides to get her in/out of bed. i'm proud of her though - despite the blisters on her heels, she's starting to use a walker! She just needs to start bending that stiff elbow. By the way, check with your insurance: Medicare covers the first 20 days, after that it depends on the terms of coverage from any "MediGap" policy or the likes that you might have, if there's a need for outpatient rehab. Other choice would be home care, IF your DH is the type to actually DO the exercises, but could you tend to him while he needed showering, using the bathroom, getting him up/down stairs, or in/out of bed, if he cannot get up himself? i had to modify blouses for Mom - tank top and cut the shoulder strap so that it's tied with ribbons. He won't be able to raise his arm, nor abduct.
Sorry to be long winded - feel free to write me if i can help please. Blessings ~ crickett
http://migration.kentucky.gov/newsroom/ag/fewerpillmills.htm
But I see nothing mentioned about patients having to sign an agreement or remain at one facility. I think Tarajane's hubby's doc may be taking it a step further.
Does this agreement prevent you from seeking treatment from any other physician for pain management? I can understand if the underlying goal is to prevent someone from seeing multiple doctors to get scripts for controlled substances, as I know that definitely can be a problem with some folks.
But if the agreement binds you not to see any other pain management specialist, I would be really concerned that this is a restrictive and anti-competitive agreement, even if it is mandated by your insurance carrier. I would think you still would have choice of physicians who accept your insurance plan.
You wrote that "they" would dismiss your husband if you failed to honor the agreement. Who's "they"? The pain management practice? Your insurance carrier?
Given your husband's risk factors, the decision to operate may also be a function of pre-surgery exams. The cardiologist and renal doctors would likely have to concur that he's a candidate for surgery. Has the ortho surgeon who proposed the surgery advised you to get these additional consults before the decision is made for surgery?
Besides the suggestions for other questions to ask, that would be an important one. How much of the pain will be cured? Can he expect full range of motion afterwards? How long will the rehab period be?
Anesthesia is tough on anyone who's older. Your husband isn't that old, but with dementia, I would believe the anesthesia will hasten his decline. Check out things like pain patches (lidoderm), which are expensive, but can work pretty well. Or has he tried TENS unit? Has he ever been to a pain management specialist? I'd research every other pain management option before I'd go the surgery route, if it was me. Good luck, it's not an easy decision either way!
Things I personally would like to know would include likelihood of success, length of rehabilitation, whether the doctor is willing to prescribe home support and for how long...his opinion on the effects of the anesthetic...I'd also ask him what other things would he tell a family member in your position. Sometimes we just don't know the questions to ask.
I wish you smoother sailing.
Has does he handle the current level of pain meds? My Mom was a mess on oxycodone, falling and sleeping all day. Finally got her dosage way down and she's much better.
My Dad had hernia surgery at 83, was in very early stage of dementia and it seemed to me that the anesthesia affected him long term. He seemed to have a dramatic drop in short term memory. Could have been a coincidence but I'm not sure.
I think you have to carefully weight the benefits of this surgery against the risks. My Mom had hip replacement at 83, I was very concerned going into it but she is doing so much better now. But it was a long and difficult trip for her.