I’m a nurse practitioner working in specialist palliative aged care. Let me share with you just a little bit about what happens in a residential aged care facility/‘nursing home’ that doesn’t have registered nurses 24/7 365 days of the year.
A 99 year old who has clearly stated his wishes in an advance care plan NOT to be transferred to hospital has a fall in the bathroom at midnight. The ambulance is called by the carers and he is taken to hospital. He develops delirium & dies four days later in hospital.
An 88 year old lady with dementia aspirates some of the biscuit she ate with her bedtime warm milk. In the small hours of the morning she develops a fever & can’t breathe properly. No one notices until the morning RN has finished med rounds at 0930.
By this stage the lady is actively dying with aspiration pneumonia. She has suffered for many hours. Her family come and are angry. They make a complaint and give the care staff a hard time every time they enter the room.
A 94 year old man with dementia falls out of bed in the middle of the night when trying to go to the bathroom. He lies on the floor for 4 hours before a carer checks on him. He has a head injury & is on a blood thinner. He has had a subdural bleed and is dead.
A 76 year old lady with metastatic breast cancer has severe bone pain, she tosses and turns and can’t sleep. Her oral medication at 8pm hasn’t helped. All night she cries out in pain. There are injectable meds on her chart for pain, but no-one to give them.
A 102 year old woman develops severe pain after a fall sustaining an unstable C1-2 fracture. Her family has spoken with the hospital team & know she will die. They ask for her to go “home” to her familiar environment and carers. She arrives back to RACF at 6pm…
Hospital doctors had suggested in d/c summary ‘when required’ morphine for pain but no ampoules were provided. After hours doctor is called to chart it on the RACF med chart and provides a script, but the pharmacy has closed. There are emergency supply ampoules in RACF but…
It’s now 10pm and the RN has finished her shift. There is no one to administer injectable medicine. By this time the lady is screaming and her family are distressed. It takes another two hours for the “on-call” RN to be contacted & come in. She gives an injection, goes home…
The carers try to change her wet pad at 4am. They have no idea how to log roll and manage an unstable fracture. They do their best, but by the time they have finished she is screaming again…
The palliative care team are called as soon as the RN arrives for duty. They come, prescribe a syringe driver and spend hours with the family trying to reassure them that their mum will receive good end of life care…
The palliative care team have had to put a higher than usual starting dose in the syringe driver, because they know there will be no one to administer medications for breakthrough symptoms overnight.
An 84 year old man with peripheral vascular disease has a necrotic leg with open wounds. Tendons & bone can be seen during dressing changes. He develops sepsis & his family request comfort care. The GP charts ‘when required’ morphine & midazolam for symptoms.
There is no one to assess whether he has pain or fever or needs the medications, or to give them after 10pm at night. He deteriorates at midnight and is actively dying. He dies a painful death.
I could go on and on. So many real examples of people who live in aged care and suffer at end of life because there is no mandate to have a registered nurse on duty 24/7. No staff ratios to ensure adequate care.
The failure of the LNP Government to act on the recommendations of the Royal Commission that they themselves ordered is astounding. Their unwillingness to bite the bullet and initiate real reform for the aged care sector is negligent, cruel and abhorrent.
I see people asking how @AlboMP will fund the promises he made in his budget reply speech. The answer is really not that hard. If you give proper nursing care, by registered nurses, you can reduce repeated hospitalisations, which costs bucket loads of money for each visit.
Good nutrition prevents skin breakdown, and helps with wound healing. Regular personal care reduces the risk of falls, urine infections and and pressure injuries. All of these things cost the health system (Medicare and PBS) a lot of money.
Above all, caring for older people is not a burden, it is a privilege. We should have the resources to do it well, and to make the final years of their life as good as they can be. They deserve it. We owe it. #ItsTime#AgedCareCrisis@anmf_federal@acnp_national@the_shb
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Happy nurses after listening to @AlboMP promising to fix the #AgedCareCrisis in his right of reply to the Budget tonight.
Ratios in aged care, registered nurses on site 24/7, nutrition standards, 215 minutes of direct care for residents by carers, backing the increased wages for aged care workers with the Fair Work Commission and accountability for every dillar received in Gov funding by providers.
The Labor Party are promising to put the CARE back in #agedcare and implement the Royal Commission recommendations
Yesterday in met a lady with dementia, the referral was for ‘escalating behaviours and aggression’. Staff have been pushed and shoved and yelled at and are having trouble managing ADLs.
According to her, she is 92 and 1/4 (we counted the months together on her fingers p).
We sat side by side in her room which was empty except for a bed, a chair, and four photos.
The car is packed and ready for a camping trip on the coast.
She hesitates, but they decide to go anyway.
There is no way the fire will get into the suburbs.
The day is hot, and suddenly the sky is black.
Smoke fills the air, sirens wail.
Canberra is alight
people are evacuated
houses and lives are lost.
Her father, in his late 80s, gets in his car.
Worried about her home,
He drives towards the roadblock
and is turned back.
Today I sat and held the swollen, fluid filled hand of an amazingly stoic 94 year old man who is in his last days of life. I have been helping him with managing symptoms for about 4 months.
He told me he is ready to go to sleep and never wake up, that he has said goodbye to his family and is ready to die. His wife is waiting for him to join her.
I told him I felt privileged to spend time with him and hear his stories and get to know him over the past months, but that I understood he was tired and suffering.