It has been an extremely long week already. I can't believe this is only Tuesday.
Sunday night at 10:45 I got a call from my Mom. She is usually in bed by then so it concerned me a little.
She told me that she thought she jammed her middle finger on her right hand. Her hand hurt and so did her whole arm. If it had been my son I would have told him if he jammed his finger to pull the it out and tape it to another one. You can't do that with an 80 year old especially your mother. I got dressed and hustled over to her place. No speed laws disobeyed by me. š¤„
I told my dr who is the cardiologist what had happened and that when I went through the front door the security system would notify him that the door had opened after hours. He misunderstood me and preceded to tell me how to enter the code to cancel the alarm going off. š Wasted effort on his part as we get a text that the door opens even if you enter the code.
I called to Mom's caregiver to wake up. Mom didn't bother to tell her she was in pain. That is often normal for a dementia patient. Get a a hold of your family not a 'stranger". I thought about letting her sleep but I needed to get into the medicine box and get info on mom's pain meds and when she last took them. (Can you imagine how much trouble both the caregiver would be in if she woke up and didn't know where Mom was? And I would be in for not telling her? At this point in time I was thinking it was only go to be a 1 hour trip to the ER and then back home.
The I looked at Mom's hand. It was curled up and she couldn't move it. I texted my br and told him that I wondered if she had a stroke. I didn't see any other signs/symptoms. He said he didn't think so. At first he was wanting to wait until morning to take Mom to the hospital. I told him she was in too much pain and wouldn't sleep. He agreed she needed to go.
When we got to the hospital they started stroke protocols including a CT scan. No use in her right arm at all. Couldn't lift it or hold it up if they let go. One RN said her mouth was turned down in one corner and one of her eyebrows drooped. I didn't see it but what do I know?
They couldn't do much for her and wanted to transfer her to a larger facility. There was the promise that a neurologist would be looking at Mom. I told them it was fine.
First the Hospitalist had to talk to the larger facility's Hospitalist. That took a while. Then we had to wait for someone to tell us they had a room. That was more than a hour. Then we had to wait for the ambulance to get there. I couldn't understand the delay. There was an ambulance about 3 blocks from the hospital where we were at. They couldn't use them. We had to wait for the service from the larger facility to drive the 30+ minutes and get to us. Heaven forbid we get Mom to the better facility 30 minutes sooner while she is having a perceived stroke.
In the mean while Mom is in pain the whole time. Her meds? One aspirin.
Mom's disorientation grows more pronounced int eh evenings. The pain only made it more so. I had to answer her questions about 50- 60 times over the 3 + hours that she was int he ER. Why is she her? How did she get there? Do I have a key to her house? How was the caregiver going to get back to her car? Did she get her things out of the house when we left? Most importantly why did her hand her so bad? That I had to answer the questions repeatedly didn't bother me. That she was still in pain and we weren't making any progress to resolving the issue was irritating
We get to the larger hospital around 3 am. They take her straight to a room instead of one of the ER exam rooms. That was nice. A bunch of RNs swoop in and do the same stuff that the smaller facility did. I understand they need to do this much it once again added to Mom's disorientation. Once again nothing was done for her pain. Not even a second aspirin. Over this 4 + hour time period there was a little improvement in her hand and arm function but it was still unusable.
They asked Mom questions that she would get wrong and I would have to correct.
Did she fall? No. Yes this pat July. She injured the same shoulder that is now so weak. She had had a lot of trouble using the arm for the past 6 months.
Was she allergic to anything? A partial answer would be augmented by me.
Had she ever had any surgeries. Once again I had to correct.
I pointed out a few times that Mom's answers would not be correct or complete.
These are the same question we were asked at the last hospital. In this day and age why can't we have a central data bank with all this info already in there? The medical people can access it and see when all the surgeries took place. Don't count on a memory impaired individual to know the answers. At one point they even had me leave the room because they had to ask her some personal questions. Maybe they do but will she give them the correct answer? I don't know.
We waited. Mom asked the same questions about 200 more times. Mainly that her hand still hurt and how did she get there. I reminded her that she made a date with one of the strong young men who drove the ambulance. She would smile.
Finally after 5 am the doctor showed up. After a minimal exam and asking Mom questions that would elicit some wrong answers she proceeded to tell me that the neurologist would be coming in and checking on her in a few hours. FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, THIS WAS ANOTHER DAMN HOSPITALIST! I guess you can't get the specialist out of bed and have her take a look at a potential stroke victim in it is between 6 pm and 9 am. What the hell was my brother doing at his hospital all night long? Playing cards? Maybe cardiologist have to be on call and deal with sick people but not neurologists. Run an MRI in the middle of the night? No way. They might have to pay someone to run two different teams. We went to this hospital because they were suppose to be the best one in the region.
All along I told the medical staff that my brother, THE CARDIOLOGIST, needs to speak to the neurologist after she exams Mom. I noticed about 3 years earlier this got Mom extra attention and shorted her wait for medical care. It didn't help this time.
Well I got things wrapped up with Mom and left somewhere near 6 am. Home after 7. People kept calling me for info so I didn't get 4 hours of sleep. My sister was on vacation with her family in "Rat World" FL. I mean Disney World. She kept saying she wanted to come home and go to the hospital. I kept telling her that she needed to stay with her family. That she couldn't do anything to improve Mom's situation. Turns out that she pulled a child out of the pool that was in the throws of drowning. I don't know if it was one of her grandkids or another child.
One of the questions I was asked when her were registering Mom was who is the POA. I told them I was. Does she have a Living Will and a Do Not Resuscitate request? "Yes". I have known about this for close to 10 years. This is the first time it hit me I might have to make THE CALL one day. It wasn't going to be this time but at some point I will. This time it was easy. If things went horribly wrong I would still want them to keep Mom on life support no matter what Mom's will says. Get everyone back here to say their goodbyes. After being up for over 24 hours it almost made me sick to think about it.
Speaking of being sick, I wasn't very happy that one of Mom's nurses had the flu and threw up in the hall. She had been sick all day and was trying to get through the shift. She was wearing a mask so the risk of transmitting her germs was minimized. Yeah that is what they said about Ebola too. At 80 years of age most people's immune system is a lot weaker and more susceptible.
So yesterday afternoon the neurologist finally got around to talking to my br. Seems that it is a pinched nerve in her neck that is causing her arm to loose it's function. More tests another CT scan and then rehab. Maybe.
I went ahead and went into Chicago last night to see my kids and celebrate my son's BDay. I got home around midnight so I am still tired today.
All in all things could be a whole lot worse.
I don't know if they ever gave her anything for the pain in her hand. I just didn't think to complain about it and make them medicate her.