My Mom passed away. Did I do the right thing?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Hi everyone. Please excuse this long post – but I am in desperate need of very honest advice and opinions, as I am uncertain as to whether I did the right thing for my beautiful Mom, who passed away recently. I need to tell the whole story, as I feel I may have caused my mother to pass – and the guilt I feel is overwhelming and I honestly don't think I cannot continue with my own life, having contributed to my Mother's demise.

My 70 yo Mom (who lived with me – and I nursed FT for 7 years) had a series of significant medical issues, including but not limited to systemic lupus, non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis (24/7 02), RV heart failure, significant weight loss (88 pounds), advanced steroid induced osteoporosis, multi pathological Fx. She was a very unwell lady – but always had a positive outlook. In the days prior to her passing, she felt extremely nauseated, very breathless, would go 16-17 hours before urinating, did not eat and was unable to walk due to feeling so weak. She also suffered from debilitating pain (despite using heavy meds). She had recently been referred to a palliative care service (in the home) – but we were still waiting to hear from them. In any case, we had regular visits from her GP, dietitians, physiotherapists and we also had access to CN and RNs if/when required. In any case – I looked after Mom full time and happily quit work in order to do so. I promised her I would not put her into a nursing home. We were doing OK – and we got by each day just being together. We were best friends.

On the day prior to my Mom's passing, she had not been to the toilet for 17 hours. I took her to the ED to have a in & out catheter to drain her urine – but a bladder scan showed she only had 6 oz of fluid in her bladder - so they didn't do it and said that she would "go" when she was ready. She complained of nausea to the Dr, who gave her Ondanzetron (antiemetic). Mom immediately fell asleep and I felt (at the time) it was because she was completely exhausted from feeling nauseated all of the time and also because she hadn't been sleeping very well (sometimes not at all). I thought it was simply her body feeling relieved. She was also taking Fentanyl for chronic pain, but I was assured that one Ondanzetron would not cause any Seratonin issues / poor interactions with her pain medications. We never really got to the bottom of WHY Mom was nauseated all the time. Her kidney function bloods were good – no UTI, etc. Actually – her bloodwork was quite good (for her).

We were taken home. Mom was still very drowsy and disorientated. But once I had her sitting up on her couch and had well positioned AND she had a cup of tea – she perked up really well. She later went to the toilet (huge wee – yay) and then she asked for some dinner (wow!! Yay). I really thought that we had solved the problem with this great medication – Ondanzetron. After dinner, Mom became drowsy again and confused. I again thought it was because she had had such a big day at the hospital.

I took her to bed that night very early. She was very unsteady on her feet during the stand transfer (more than usual) – and this was the reason I put her to bed early. It was a difficult process, but we got there. She was in a right lateral position, with her head slightly elevated and her legs slightly elevated with pillows to protect her heals from pressure. She was on a pressure relieving mattress.

Ordinarily, I would turn Mom every 3 hours (from right lateral - to supine - and then back into right lateral again later). This worked well. She had very poor skin integrity, already had a stage 4 pressure ulcer (courtesy of a hospital stay), and due to her poor nutritional status and heavy requirement for steroids, I felt regular turning was important. She would usually rouse a little to help me with the re-positioning – and after about 1-2 minutes, we'd be finished and she go back to sleep. Ordinarily, she wouldn't even remember being turned.

But on THAT night it was different. After I put Mom to bed, she was staring off into the distance. I asked her if she could see something or someone – she said no. I asked her if something was wrong – she said no. I asked her if she was angry with me – she said no. I asked her if she was in pain – she said no. All just single words. I told her to close her eyes and that I would be sleeping right beside her if she wanted anything. I put a mattress on the floor beside her bed, so I could be close.

I checked on her an hour later – she was fine. I then checked on her 3 hours later – she looked fine. I was going to turn her then – but she looked so peaceful – and it had only been 4 hours, so I made an executive decision to leave her a little bit longer and that her sleep was more important. I got up 2 hours later to check on her. At this point, she had been in the same position for 6 hours. I really felt it was important to re-position her a little. I took the pillows out from under her legs. Turned them over, so they were nice and cool and moved her legs a little. Instead of a big roll into a supine position – I decided to just give her a small lateral nudge, to move the pressure point slightly. I didn't want to wake her. When I nudged her, she flopped almost into a prone position and seemed unconscious. This surprised me. I had never experienced that before. At that point, I felt I had no other choice but to place her into a supine position. But when I did that, she was too far down the bed, so I had to turn her laterally again, place a slide sheet underneath her, turn her supine again and shift her up the bed. When removing the slide sheet, Mom flopped over into a right lateral position. Again this had never happened before. She was clearly unconscious – and I would have thought that after 6 hours of sleep, she would rouse a little bit. As I turned her back, she became very pale and it was obvious she had passed away.

So, my question is – have any of you experienced something like this before? And to what extent do you think my actions contributed to my Mom's passing? Please be honest with me. If it was my fault - then I really need to know. Mom and I were best friends and I did everything I possibly could to do all the right things.

I appreciate any and all advice you can offer.

WOW, you are making me feel more guilty about my own mom dying. (a very similar situation all the way down to stage 4 wound). My mom was so stubborn that no matter what I did (even trying to finish nursing school ) to be able to give her fluids as she refused medical care, almost crawled out f rehabs, whacking anyone in her way until she got to that point where she could no longer move in such a feisty way, melted to nearly 75 pounds soaking wet. And yet I found her near dead several times by surprise visits (she had to go to the hospital we couldn't do it anymore) The way she died was via so called "comfort care" where they starved her to death pumped her with so much meds from pity alone. All staff including some family in nursing for over 30 years gave her 2 days tops. Not her , she went on 7 days but the way she died was miserable rattltes of death and although they stated she was unconscious , her vital signs told me this was untrue when I walked in the room she heard my voice and her vitals went haywire so much so I had to leave the room. My entire family , all 5 of my adult children were there and nobody left we all took shifts. To watch her die that way was more painful than all my years on a 911 truck because it wasn't comfort care for her. You gave your mom truly excellent care and I only wish my mom could have died peacefully in her sleep instead of hours and hours and days gasping and rattling away struggling until the point of exhaustion and bone dry dehydrated to the point her organs shut down and her heart that was the strongest willed gave out from the fight. I wish I could have done that for my mom. Rest easy, she's smiling down on you . My mom will probably give me such a boot when we meet again. Love & Peace to you .

From the bottom of my heart - that you so very much for all your thoughtful comments / stories and useful information. Many of them brought me to tears - especially those of you who recounted the passing of their own mothers. The only way I can console myself is knowing that I did my absolute utmost to protect and care for my beautiful mother. In all honesty, I believe the problem must have been some form of orthostatic hypotension with the movement - or perhaps she may have aspirated, but after 6 hours, I felt I had no other choice but to reposition her to ensure she didn't form another terrible pressure ulcer. My usual routine was Q3 - but for some reason I thought her rest was more important that night. Had I known that she was actively dying, perhaps I would have done things differently, but I didn't know that she was. I felt hopeful. Maybe I was in denial. All I can say is that together, we battled and fought as a team to get through each day until the very end. We never gave up hope that tomorrow might be a better day. Thank you once again.

Specializes in School Nursing, Hospice,Med-Surg.

Your mom was incredibly blessed and fortunate to have you with her for so long. It sounds like you took such wonderful care of her, looking after each detail and staying close to her. I worked as a Hospice RN for 12 years and saw so many situations where people had no one at their side as they passed away alone or they had several children who couldn't take any time to bother with them. It was heartbreaking.

So, it's very sweet and heartwarming when a child or family member dedicates themselves and gives of themselves the way you did for your mother. Please know you did your very best. You were wonderful to her. It was her time and you were there with her. What a wonderful gift!

Specializes in medical surgical.

Sweet lady, you are in the early stage of mourning. I am quite sure that you were a blessing to your mother in her time of need. Please contact a bereavement counseling service. Many churches or offices have this. Please do this ASAP. You need someone to talk to.

LovingMom,

Please consider this. Your mother's last moments passed while she was receiving your loving and tender care. You did not cause her to pass. I hope your broken heart can take some refuge in the fact that you were attending to her comfort as she left this world. You have been a blessing.

Warmly,

JKL

Hard for me to see how you did the wrong thing, except in one area that I'll get to in a moment. From what you've described, your mom received care well beyond the level she would have had you left her in the care of others. Your fear is that you somehow hastened her passing - you might want to consider the possibility that your repositioning at that exact moment actually bought her some extra time, albeit just a few seconds. Equally plausible, no?

And, for the record, yes, I had the honor of being my mother's caregiver for the last 4+years of her life, and yes, I had a client pass while being repositioned - several months ago, and I was doing a brief change. Pt. arrested as I was putting the fresh brief on, and I buttoned everything up only to find the pt. had gone completely limp. Got pt. on their back, called for an RT first (1st person I saw) who flagged the charge nurse down, who knew the pt. was on hospice and was DNR/DNI. So - no CPR, and we did a quick prep while the desk nurse notified the family and hospice. Tends to be something of a shock, even when you're not a family member.

As far as my criticism - just on one point, and it's very common. When you accept the role of caregiver you absolutely MUST TAKE PROPER CARE OF YOURSELF, and it sounds like you weren't and aren't. Yeah, you're grieving; been there, done that. It takes a bit to assimilate all that's gone on - true dat. But - you still have one last obligation to your mom, and that is to continue on and have a good life. Counseling if you feel you need it, but more importantly to be good to yourself. Cut yourself some slack, sit down with some trusted friends and talk about the good times both past and future. I've no doubt your mom would want you to. Take it from one who's been there.

----- Dave

I just want to give you a big hug. Your mother was dying from multiple health problems. It was a matter of time and I don't think anything you did contributed to that. If anything the care that you gave her probably extended her time on earth. Please continue to see a counselor and work through your grief. So sorry for your loss

Your mother was in the process of dying, you took excellent care of her.

Don't beat yourself up over the details.

I have been there, done that. Time to let yourself grieve.

Peace.

+ Add a Comment