Full episodes available here: https://www.togethertv.com/hospice The imminent arrival of a complex patient has hospice staff a little nervous. Click here to …
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Copyright (c) 2020 – All rights reserved.
Full episodes available here: https://www.togethertv.com/hospice The imminent arrival of a complex patient has hospice staff a little nervous. Click here to …
source
© 2020 Copyright - All rights reserved.
My sister not get hug her son he passed west coast state she at work ugh sad ? she feels guilty she could have helped know it s painful everyday n holidays
I really admire the work these people do. Making the end of someone's life as comfortable and painless as possible is probably one of the kindest things a human can do. We shouldn't take this for granted and we should compensate these people very well.
I would rather die at home an have hospice come out to my home. That's what my grandmother did and they were able to come out and manage her pain and still take care of her in the little bit of time she had left and she enjoyed being at home and we enjoyed being able to be with her.
I was a hospice chaplain for 10 years; worked with inpatient care and home care. Loved that work.
Thank God for Hospice RN'S, volunteers and Palliative care Physicians.
Hospice workers are such wonderful people! You are all so kind and we are all grateful that you look after everyone who sadly needs end of life care! I pray for everyone who has to sadly pass away with or without anyone by their side and I send love & strength to anyone who needs it! ?
Thankyou….????
what a fat arse
Our local hospital closed their hospice ward. This means that patients have to be transported 40 miles away to the nearest hospice facility. Its heart breaking.
Hospice care and the staff are a special breed of people. My interaction with hospice staff for my sister was very uplifting and her finals days were as comfortable as they could be and as attentive as could be to both the patient and the family.
Very sad but encouraging to know that there is angels among us . God bless you all with the awesome job you are doing .
Hospice will kill this man in a few weeks. I've seen it in 3 members of my family and if I could tell them to take a hike I would looking back now. THEY KILL!!!!
Is he a MND patient ?
God bless you all..you are angels on earth all these wonderful staff in these hospices do an amazing job ❤❤?❤❤
they were wonderful with my brother in law !!
My son passed away a few months ago in the Arthur Rank Charity hospital. He had very aggressive cancer which destroyed and took him from us in a short seven week period. He was so brave, and managed to marry his sweetheart in that time as well as make provision for their little two year old. I can’t fault the tender care that ALL the staff there gave him, as well as support for us ,his family. They said it was a privilege to nurse him, and he became quickly attached to his nurses . I thank ALL hospice carers all over, as it isn’t a job for just anyone , but from the bottom of my heart, I’m so glad my son passed on from there so peacefully and pain free. He was so brave all through his ordeal which paralysed him at the end bless him.
Hospice volunteer here too. Best. Thing I ever did. Those patients and their family’s became my loved ones too.
All hospice nurses should be killed just like the baby murdering women on the left
Hospice nurses are murders you sick people almost killed my mom thank God my dad threw them out of his house when he did the hospice nurses wanted to give her one more dose of pain medicine my dad was watching and all sudden he grabbed the nurse and started yelling at me to open her hand when I did over 30 pills feel to the floor we drug that dumb bitch out the door and down a flight of stairs she was injured but who cares I kept telling my dad to kill her but he wouldn't after that day my mom was so happy we saved her life she lived over 2 years after that day
Do you hospice workers(past and present) ever witness the visiting of previously deceased family members who've come to help to he patients cross over? ..or sense their presence by reaction of the dying in their last hours?
I have severe COPD & just released from hospital 2 was ago. The Drs suggested I get in touch with hospice, and I did speak to someone about it before I left hospital. I am shocked and saddened that I am preparing to die. I don’t want to die as I have too much to live for! Well, I told my Dr that I am not ready. I continued with my plans to go to our house in Florida with my husband & will take one day at a time. So far I feel ok and taking my meds. I will continue my life as usual & when I feel that death is beckoning me I will seek hospice. Copd is final. I am 75 & just have my husband. My son, an only child passed away 4 years ago. My dear friends either passed or moved. In a way I wish the Dr. didn’t tell me about the short time I have left. I know it’s true, but I still can’t believe it. I understand that hospice will give me wonderful care. Yet, I want to live!
I was a Hospice volunteer for 2 years after I myself came out of a 16 day coma in 2012.
When I had respiratory failure, my family was told there was nothing else they could do.
But the Heavenly Lord had other plans for me.
When I became a Hospice volunteer I never imagined how tough but yet so rewarding it would be to sit next to someone that was in the process of dying.
There's people that have noone to be with them when they die and that's so heart breaking.
I had a patient that his family refused to be with him when they were told ge was dying.
At 1st I couldn't understand how someone could be so cold blooded and refuse something like this.
But then I realized it wasn't my job to criticized noone and that God had assigned me to be there for this patient.
When patient took his last breath, I cried uncontrollably and hugged him Oh so hard.
The last hug I gave him I'm 100% sure he felt because his body started relaxing and his face had the most peaceful expression I will never forget.
Victoria now has Euthanasia laws in place, so people can die with dignity.
In the US The Medicare hospice benefit will only allow people to be admitted to inpatient hospice care at the very end of life or briefly for pain or symptom management. I'm a hospice nurse and work on a home team as an RN case manager. It sounds like a fancy thing but it's not. I make weekly visits which increase in frequency during times of increased symptoms. I wish that we had more impatient care available. There is an astounding increase in dementia and neurological disorders.
My sister died the first day in hospice January 2019.
So sad God bless the the Family
My mom died in a hospice peacefully in her sleep
Rest In Peace mom 1933 – 2019
Ellos no ama a las personas matan la gente
I could never work in a place like this. I would be crying my heart out every single day !!
no way on shaper short didn't work for my size 10 ass!
I did hospice with both my parents, at home in front of the Bay window.
♡
I work in a nursing home. At age 17, i’m a CNA and I love my job. The hardest part of this job is watching residents who you’ve grown to love, to be friends with, almost like family, deteriorate. Three residents have passed so far, and i’ve only worked as a CNA March-present (July as of right now). The last one, her name was Judith. Weeks before, she was able to do everything by herself. She would walk around, and sit by the nurses station. She never talked, but I remember her asking me to sit with her. She said it in this small voice, and I told her that the second I am done with this, I will. But then we had an altercation and a fall. I forgot about it. She went to bed. Then, her cancer spread. She became bed-bound, and she never talked. I’d always go in and change her, make sure she atleast drank something. One day I realized her body was cleaning out, preparing to die. Every day, id still sit by her bed. Hold her hand, and when she thought she was somewhere else, I went with it. She believed me. I’d been doing a routine with her, and the last night, I chatted with her and told her goodnight. That I loved her and to be good. She said she will try, and goodnight. Judith passed away shortly after my shift was over at 11. Listen to your residents. Treat them with love. She had family, but no one came to see her. You need to be the rock for these people, the stability they need to pass on.
Update: It is now September. 6 have passed, and another is on her death bed. It’s sad, I understand that. But these people are dying. Imagine how you’d feel if your family made you live in a place you do not recognize, a place that definitely does not feel like a home. For many, their family is now the CNA’s, PCA’s, and Nurses that work day in and day out. We have a family to come home to at the end of the work day. They don’t.
15 years ago my grandmother chose hospice over more treatment. She wanted to spend her last days with her only great grandchild (my daughter). She stayed at my parents a little over a month. Jan 2, 2004 she passed which was my dad's birthday.
Ward Sister reminds me of Sarah Ferguson ! Lol
Great episode. Nothing like hospice ! Makes many differences in many lives every day !
God Bless you all, such wonderful people- so young and brave young man and his fantastic family
Hospice staff are a very special bred of people…..it requires more than nursing. My sisters care in hospice was very personal and very caring. I couldn't ask for anything more.
Our NHS is the best in the world!
N;
Hospice is a beautiful place they take care of u
Bless these unsung heroes. They perform a very difficult job with the highest of care and integrity, helping those who need it the most.
Palliative care Nurses are wonderful.
My mother's 2nd husband was a hospice nurse. They met when my mom was in the hospital for one of her many illnesses. Met, married. Thought my mom would live beyond me – but I was wrong. He lied and played games with her mind. He ended up giving her huge amounts of morphine after he sent me home – and she passed less than an hr after i left. Evil man.