My mother was also. My sister had a horrible disease called cortical basal degenerative disease. ALS on steroids. In the end it was horrible regardless.
We could only watch her suffer till the end and keep her comfortable and unconscious.
Im so sorry you had to go through that. I know my grandmother is still looking out for me because I feel every time I think about her. Im sure your sister is still with you in your heart and its the best of her, no longer suffering.
That's pretty much hospice protocol throughout the US. Unless you are at home, you're at their mercy. My mother was killed by a "palliative care" worker who had a instructed a nurse to give my mother 4 times the amount of morphine that she was receiving. I looked at the worker at said excuse me but you just told that nurse to pump four times the amount of morphine that is circulating through her system right now. She ignored me and told the nurse to do it. This went back and forth for a while and finally the nurse pushed the morphine. 23 minutes later my mother was gone. That was in 2017. No lawyer would touch it. In 2020 I learned from another lawyer that this is common practice.
Hospice protocol across Texas?
My grandmother was in hospice for a while and it wasn't very pleasant.
My mother was also. My sister had a horrible disease called cortical basal degenerative disease. ALS on steroids. In the end it was horrible regardless. We could only watch her suffer till the end and keep her comfortable and unconscious.
Im so sorry you had to go through that. I know my grandmother is still looking out for me because I feel every time I think about her. Im sure your sister is still with you in your heart and its the best of her, no longer suffering.
no words but thank you
That's pretty much hospice protocol throughout the US. Unless you are at home, you're at their mercy. My mother was killed by a "palliative care" worker who had a instructed a nurse to give my mother 4 times the amount of morphine that she was receiving. I looked at the worker at said excuse me but you just told that nurse to pump four times the amount of morphine that is circulating through her system right now. She ignored me and told the nurse to do it. This went back and forth for a while and finally the nurse pushed the morphine. 23 minutes later my mother was gone. That was in 2017. No lawyer would touch it. In 2020 I learned from another lawyer that this is common practice.