My dad has Alzheimer's and fell. He went to the hospital where they gave him Dilaudid for pain and he hasnt been the same since. Its been days and now they dont seem to know why his dementia has gotten so much worse. They are now saying that they want to take him the psych ward. My sister fears it is to evaluate him that his decline was normal not due to the heavy drug side effects.. Is this a scary place for an alzheimers patient?
I bet you get some other responses to this from those who know much more about it.
In my mom's case, she had had a knee replacement. She was doing great, participating with PT etc. until one of the nighttime nurses gave her dialaudid. She was so zoned out and floppy like a rag doll. She could not sit up on her own. She could not do the PT. A one time administration of dialaudid kept her in the hospital for an extra three days.
As his advocate find out the following:
- why did he fall? ( infection, stroke, decreased heart rate and dizziness, tripping or poor balance, dehydration)
- did he hit his head?
- why did they put him on Dilaudid ( pretty heavy med)
- Get Pain Management team involved to evaluate his pain and treat it.
- Only have you Dad see a geriatric psych practitioner or a geriatrician. These practitioners know these situations best and will deal with them with more experience.
- medications and anesthesia can cause ( increased) delirium in people over 65.
Yes, being hospitalized or doing anything out of the norm is difficult for anyone. It is impossible for a demented person to deal with until he feels that this is his " new normal" Your father needs to feel reassured that he is safe, and that he will be well cared for. You may need to let him know this many many times a day.
In any case, a logical step by step procedure of finding out the cause of the fall, and correcting that cause will lead to remedying everything else. Just let the most competent Nurse Practitioner, MD or D.O. who has experience with dementia patients be his primary care provider.
Take care of of yourself too
We're with you on this. Take care,
Carol
I thought my Mom had dementia/alzheimers. Nurse comes in after I've
been restraining her cause she tried to pull out IV & cathera - nurse gave
her liquid Norco thru drip & she changed back to mostly normal. She thought
she could get out the bed with a broken leg by herself & go to the bathroom.
After her 3rd surgery, the surgery nurse actually somewhat bragged that they
had given her dilaudid - I was really upset. This happened before as well with
my Dad, which I lost during all these surgeries my Mom had. The nursing home during PT stay lied about reducing her meds especially ativan, zoloft, tramadol,
zanaflex & a couple others which I can't remember right now. Mom left wheelchair bound from the NH & they thought that she had met all her goals. I
moved her to assisted living for a short time. The PT guy came 2-3 times a week & we dropped some meds & she was walking in a couple months & her mind was better. Also, after she fell at the NH (34th day - 2nd leg break), I hired 24/7 sitters to be with her even though this was supposedly a really good NH. Ratings
have dropped since that time. After 9 months in assisted living, I did move her home with 24/7 companions & she is still a fall risk but she is more lucid but has
slight dementia & is taking the meds for that. She is off pain meds but is still on Ativan & Zoloft. It is very expense to have 24/7 companions but for us it is the only way I could go home. I also got her a jitterbug cell phone instead of the other monitor systems (works out to be about same cost to have). It has a red Alarm button that even if she pushes it accidentally we pay for the service-if she doesn't answer they call me next. This is what I've learned over a 2 year period- Trust No One & check & visit as often as you can. Hope this helps.
The geriatric psych ward at the hospital was wonderful! They worked on the medication withdrawals as well as had group and individual therapy. It was a hard thing to do, but I'm glad I did it.
I do believe that it can wear off - and in response to Pondering9Rosy above, it is possible that when you get your husband out of that facility that he could return to the way he was when he arrived there. You definitely (in my opinion) need to get him out of there.
Back to our situation, my mom came back to being "herself" after a knee replacement when a hospital (night shift) nurse doped up with dialauded. After that single dose, I flat out REFUSED to allow them to give her any additional.
The night shift hospital nurse that gave her the dialauded received a negative report from me to hospital management. That extra dose resulted in an extra three day hospital stay because my mom had to be able to get through her PT before she could be dismissed. After the dialauded my mom was basically completely unable to phrase a single sentence, combative, and limp. It was absolutely horrible. She will NEVER return to that hospital.
Happy to report that she is now at our house and doing well. Effects of dialauded are well in the past (and staying there).