I’m hoping for that yeah. I guess though if you get hospice then you can’t be at the cancer center anymore. Cuz you’re getting different care. I don’t know what that means long term.
It means there is nothing else they can do to make him well again, so they're going to give the time he has left back to him.I’m hoping for that yeah. I guess though if you get hospice then you can’t be at the cancer center anymore. Cuz you’re getting different care. I don’t know what that means long term.
Most of my family are non-christians. They're hoping if they go to mass and tithe a bit they earn their eternal-vacation plan. Or, basically, they do think they are Christians.Basically they gave him the “do you want us to help you or not” speech and he hasn’t answered yes or no yet. He doesn’t wanna do anything. He just wants to sleep and never wake up and it be over. But he still doesn’t think he’s Christian. What is gonna happen to him on the other side? That is what scares me most.
It's roughly the same thing in both countries, but I think football games are outside the realm of possibilities. (They cost a mint to go to, not to mention we're talking different sports, and our football season is over until August.) But yes, it is most definitely about quality of life now. Quantity is given up for quality.If hospice care in the states is anything like the UK it is patient centred. You treat symptoms but not to cure. The aim is to keep the person comfortable and deal with them holistically. So in some cases if they want to go to a final football match that is fascilitated. If they want to be outside in the sun shine it could mean moving the bed outside. Clinicians will often treat to agressively eventually we need to take a step back and ask what the patient wants. Why do blood tests if it wont change how we manage the person's care. It can be quality of life vs quantity. Also Steph wanted to say what a lovely pic.
I guess, in a sense, the thread is now closed.......