Re: Extubated my patient
I'm so sorry you went through this difficult situation unprepared and unassisted. Someone should have walked you through it ahead of time, and, ideally, have been standing at your side to give your moral support. Maybe staffing didn't allow for that, but it would have softened the blow and given you a chance to lean on a peer.
You didn't kill your patient. You released her from the agonizing existence of being kept alive by meds and machines. You let nature take its course in the body of someone for whom there was no recovery. It's a pretty good bet that the fentanyl spared her any conscious pain. Respiratory struggle can occur on purely a mechanical level; it doesn't mean that she had any awareness or suffering.
I'm guessing that this is affecting you so strongly because you didn't see it coming. You had no chance to work through a nurse's natural resistance to halting the fight for life and taking the opposite direction entirely. This would be akin to going into labor without any childbirth education. Yeah, you do what it takes to endure it, but it leaves you traumatized and fearful of going through it again.
Here are some suggestions:
Do some journaling. Put into words the feelings that are swirling around inside you. The act of putting them on paper defuses some of the free-floating anxiety that can give you nightmares and jitters.
Talk to other nurses. Your colleagues in the ICU. NICU nurses. Hospice nurses. Ask them how they came to terms with dying and death, especially in cases similar to yours where they played a part.
Google for information and read the accounts of others who have struggled with these issues.
Give yourself grace. Killing is so very different from allowing someone whose body can no longer sustain life to pass.
If you are a spiritual person, give thanks for the peace your patient is now able to experience. Pray for peace in your own heart and trust that you will gain wisdom and strength from going through this episode.
Write a letter to your patient expressing your sorrow and your hope that she is alive in a much better way (if this is something you can believe).
Write out a scenario where you are the mentor to a new nurse experiencing this for the first time. Guide her and tell her what you wish someone would have told you. Imagine it the way you wish it could have been. I have heard many hospice nurses say that they see a similarity between helping someone die and helping someone be born. They are, in some respects, midwives, helping a soul to enter a new world. Viewed in this light, the actions taken can be liberating.
I hope some of these ideas are helpful. Allnurses.com is a wonderful forum in which to vent and seek support. I don't know that you'll ever take death lightly (or that you'd want to), but there will come a time when you will be able to be there for your patient without feeling torn apart. I wish you well.