We as nurses have little comprehension of what a family member goes through unless we have experienced it ourselves. I received a thorough schooling in this field several years ago. My husband, H (now deceased) needed a “minor” laparoscopic surgery. But we had no idea what was going to happen from the first day on.
Updated:
H. was scheduled for the removal of a colon polyp after a colonoscopy failed to reach the tissue for biopsy. My husband was a very obese diabetic, who had recovered from a Wallenberg Stroke four years before with only a residual weakness in his balance center. His return to his job four months later demonstrated great determination and strength to endure the rigorous therapy required to achieve this recovery. These qualities helped him later as you will see.
We arrived in the pre-operative area early for the prep for the surgery. I watched as the staff rolled my husband of 35 years away from me into an area where I could not go. I had been his advocate and caregiver after the stroke and felt very protective and responsible for him. I felt so helpless and anxious for his well being now. The thought that surgeons are human and can make mistakes hovered in my mind.
While waiting for our son to arrive, I felt so alone and helpless. As soon as he arrived I felt his support shoring up my strength and calmness.
A family member needs someone to help them spend the long hours that tick by so slowly during the surgery and recovery room care of a loved one. They don't know if there will be complications. Encourage them to call someone if they are alone. Regardless of years of experience and understanding of how things go in the hospital, I felt very alone until M came.
So we waited. M, our son, was concerned that they might not be able to inflate the weight of his father's abdominal adipose tissue for the lap surgery. Sure enough, the surgeon came out and told us they needed to make a mid-line incision to reach the polyp. We understood and I gave consent.
Soon an anesthetist came out and told us that three different anesthesiologists had been unable to put a central line in my husband's neck because it was so short and obese. I gave consent for a PIC line.
Stress was mounting! What else could go wrong? What if he had another stroke? What if he had more complications? Even with the information given to the family, anxiety can run rampant especially when there are already complications.
We soon found out about complications. After his surgery which actually went better than it started, there was no bed in ICU, so he was placed in CCU overnight for monitoring while on an epidural drip.
His O2 saturation dropped into the 70s so he needed oxygen. He had a nasogastric tube and was supposed to be using his CPAP for his severe sleep apnea. Trying to fit a CPAP mask over a nasogastric tube was impossible to do. So we kept the oxygen flowing and raised his head slightly.
I had been an ICU/CCU nurse for 17 years and didn't mind helping the nurses in the unit. During the night in a confused state, he repeatedly removed his oxygen mask. So about every 15 minutes the O2 saturation alarms declared his dropping oxygen level; I would hop up quickly and put the O2 back on his face. Finally, in exasperation or desperation, I ordered him to put his oxygen back on! He glared at me and said, "NO!" and removed it again!
I am a very kind, polite and nice person, but was severely sleep deprived, had lots of stress, and worry that day. I said something I would never say normally.
"Fine! Take the oxygen off! When you pass out, I'll just put it back on again!"
I believe the nurses realized how exhausted I was and told me they could watch him so I could sleep. Yes, people do not behave normally when they haven't had enough sleep and are stressed out! Ask for a chaplain to help the family member be realistic about what they can do and how much sleep they need and make them leave for a while.
Please deal kindly and compassionately with the family's irritation or anger. Remember how many times someone has told you, "Don't worry, things will be fine." But they weren't? Words don't always help.
Allow the family to express their fears to help them. It helps just to know someone is listening. Remember they are turning their beloved over to doctors, nurses and staff who they have never met before, who may be very busy, and who may not understand the patient's requests or needs.
Then there are more "What ifs." "What if he develops another problem?" What if he won't be able to go back to work or his hobbies? What if...?" Believe me, there are many imagined "What ifs."
That night one nurse did something I will never forget. My husband liked to be cold so there was a fan blowing on him. I like to be warm but I wanted to see him and him to see me at all times. So I pulled the recliner to his bedside and faced him.
One angel brought a pile of heated blankets and without being asked to literally tucked me in! I never felt so cared for since I was a child! She understood and was so kind! I slept some after that.
If you can, take time to listen or offer a small kindness for the family. Offer to call their pastor, the hospital chaplain, or the supervisor.
After a couple of nights, the epidural was removed and the doctor ordered Percocet two tablets every 4 hours for pain. I know the doctor was trying to keep him comfortable and considering my husband's size and history of back surgery and sciatica he ordered a large dose. The thing he did not consider was that my husband was narcotic naive.
After one day H could not sit up; slept all the time; drank very little; and ate nothing. So on day three the doctor came and told my husband in no uncertain terms that he "had to get up." The doctor's tone of voice was the one they use when they are being firm with a manipulative or lazy patient. I was a bit upset that he assumed that H was lazy! But I knew something else had to be done.
Since I knew H was not lazy. I began to worry that he might have had a second stroke. After several futile attempts by the staff to get H up, I spoke with the hospitalist that night. My husband had a high tolerance for pain, was very independent, and absolutely not lazy. I had to be his advocate.
The hospitalist decreased the Percocet. As H came out of the drug-induced stupor he started acting like himself. He refused any more pain medicine as soon as he was lucid enough to understand what had happened. He related how he had been having hallucinations, confusion and terror attacks!
Finally, he was moving around and helped staff get him up. He preferred to have pain rather than losing control of his own mind. It took physical therapy three weeks during his stay and after his discharge to increase his strength to near normalcy.
Being a nurse I know and understand that doctors and nurses are people and they make mistakes. We all do. But when my loved one has so many problems and complications I could not help but worry about mistakes or misjudgments being made.
Plus there were always the questions that caused fear: How long will he need to recover? Will he be able to go back to work soon? (He loved his job.) I knew he had lots of sick time and had a good stable job but some patients don't. Some families may be very anxious about how to pay for the hospital stay plus the tests, IV fluids, lab work, radiologist bill and so many bills for so many treatments. Get them someone from case management to help them navigate this sea of bills they will receive.
After 11 days for what should have been a three-day stay, the staples were removed and H was discharged. But that is still not the end of this story.
Three days after the staples were removed it was evident that his abdomen had not healed well. The wound dehisced in four places. The largest area was a tunneled wound 1 inch by 1 ½ inches and two inches deep in the middle of the incision.
It took four months for the areas to heal. I cleaned and packed them twice a day for him. Imagine the stark terror of a non-medical person if they had seen their loved one's wound opening up and then having to treat it.
So family members need their own nurse? Well, not really. They just need lots of understanding and compassion from the ones caring for their loved one. We know nurses cannot do everything. When you cannot help in some area ask for help. But try to understand what the family is going through.
Remember, "Walk a mile in someone's moccasins before you judge them." A lot goes on that we don't know about in the family's mind.
Susan, thank you so much!! Six years ago my husband (died two years after that surgery) from right sided heart failure. Because of your comment and my experience with this and his Wallenberg stroke several years before this surgery, I may just have to write two more articles. lol. Thank you so much for the encouragement. I am finding more and more that writing is a great way to express myself and to help others.
Wow, thank you, Susie!! I am so honored and thrilled by these comments! If it is okay to do that, I will be happy to suggest that it be moved to the student forum. I have a couple of other stories to tell about my poor husband's health. He passed away 6 years ago next month. (About two years after that surgery.)
Susie, you are so right. As healers we should be focusing on those who need healing. And the family members are indeed patients too. I agree totally that nurses and staff, who are often stretched to their limits, welcome family members who are willing to help. If they choose to help it is not because they have to and we should not expect them to. Thank you for the blessings. I feel like I have been given so much that I am compelled to share what I can to make the world a better place.
Thank you for your comments. As a student nurse in the early 70s, I worked as a nurse tech in NICU. I knew that I could not take care of those sweet innocent little babies without emotional trauma. Seeing parents crying and worried just tore me up. You have to be able to maintain some emotional distance for repeated emotionally draining patients.
Each of us has different ways of dealing with the pain and suffering we see each day. Sometimes we carry it home with us and weep, sometimes we break down at work on break. But we have to be able to at least understand why someone is behaving the way they are in order to help them. That is what I wanted to convey by the quote. At least try to understand what is going on with the patient or family.
But priorities have to be set and the family has to be set on the "back burner" until our patients are cared for. But at the very least we can ask for a chaplain, the supervisor, another family member or make a referral to get the family help if they are having a difficult time. So glad you found the article helpful.
Joyful2bee, ADN, RN
10 Posts
No one had ever done that for me since I was a child. It almost made me cry that she was so kind and thoughtful. We as nurses are often the ones that make the difference in the patients' and the family members' satisfaction and comfort. It is a lot of extra work, but well worth it.