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The ambulance picked her up after putting her in the ambulance she went into sepsis sock. She passed away Saturday at 9:00pm. Im so angry with them. This was preventable, she didn't deserve to die like this. The worse thing for her and the family to put through. My question is how long was she sick, she had fever, uti, kidney stones and no one knew!!! Dont know how to get through this. I would spend time with her every weekend and my Aunt and Uncle would send every Wednesday with her. They said Wednesday she seemed herself besides drinking alittle more. She was in a nursing home because in 2014 she had a stroke, lost her speech and was unable to walk. Me and my 2 sister took care of her for a few months but were unable to give her the care that she needed.
We had faith and trust in the nursing home we put her in, we had all worked there in the passed including mom as CNA's. Things have changed since back in the 90's no one seems to want to do that kind of work and the residents are the ones who suffers.
She came a long way since then always singing and knew how to put a smile on everyones face that she met. My mom was my reason im on this earth, dont know what im going to do without her.

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Deb I am so sorry about the way your Mo died and the way it is affecting you. Your Aunt and uncle saw her on Wed and she seemed her usual self but two days later she waist septic shock and died the next day.
Unfortunately Septic Shock is usually fatal especially in the elderly and in someone as compromised as your Mom. Only about 5% of people survive it even in the best of circumstances. It also comes on very suddenly as in your mother's case. She obviously had some form of underlying infection which was not recognized and would not be suspected as she was behaving normally. She could not speak so could not tell anyone if she was hurting somewhere. Staff did not know there was something wrong until they noticed she was having difficulty breathing when they called for an ambulance. Did they fail to notice something and not take action? I was not there so can not guess the answer. they'd however take actin as soon as they realized something was wrong.
It is easy to blame the staff but from your experience CNAs are the workers who do the most care of the residents and their formal training is minimal. With many years of experience they can learn a lot if they are so inclined. In the nHs in my area there is often not an RN on duty just on call and there maybe one LPN in the facility for 50+ patients and her time is taken up with medications and other treatments. Since your family worked as CNAs there has been a lot of corner cutting to make profit as you know and the staff are kept so busy they can not do a proper job. there is also a huge turnover of staff. One survey said staff turnover was up to 100% i some facilities. Given that, there is no time to get to know the patients and recognise what is their normal. Also it is not the routine to check patients vital signs every day unless there is a problem.
Lots of things came together and as a result you lost your dear Mom. Try and concentrate on remembering the good times and grieve her death rather than looking for a scapegoat.
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I'm so sorry, Deb. I saw the word 'sepsis' in my newsfeed and I had to check this out. As I read your words, I couldn't help recall what I went through with my father this past July. Yes, sepsis does happen very suddenly.

Uhm... My bedridden father lives at his home. I live with him as his main caregiver even though I still have a full-time job. When my dad had pneumonia about 2 years ago, he refused to go to the doctor. He only agreed when he couldn't breath (at the ER, his lung was almost filled with fluid.) .... This year, I saw the same signs of pneumonia (hacking cough, phlegm changing color to thick greenish.) Again, repeatedly he refused to go to the doctor.

Deb, it was a regular Wednesday morning. I changed his pamper, gave him breakfast, and I got ready for work. As I was leaving the house, I waved goodbye to him and said, "Later!" He was sitting upright on his bed. No heavy coughing or anything. He was normal. I came home from work around 6:30pm. He was sleeping. I decided to let him sleep. When it was time to change his pamper, he wouldn't wake up. He was burning up with high fever. About 2 hours later, with me battling with his up and then down raging fever, he started struggling to breathe. I finally called 911. ER aggressively tried to stop the shut down of his organs. Everything was shutting down by day 2. I learned he was sepsis and also bleeding inside somewhere, etc... It was like a domino effect.

I sometimes sit here, still shocked on how suddenly he went from 'normal' in the morning to his organs shutting down by midnight. My dad did not have a fever when I had changed his pamper in the morning. He was normal. His coloring was normal. He spoke to me normally. He was normal. It just was so sudden - sepsis....

I'm so sorry, Deb. {{{HUGS}}}
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Deb, a I am so sorry for your loss.
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Deb, I'm sorry that your mother passed in such a quick way, and that the events surrounding her death are so disturbing to you. That makes her loss even more difficult.

Veronica offers excellent insight into the situation, especially with sepsis, which acts quickly, especially in the elderly.

You ask: "My question is how long was she sick, she had fever, uti, kidney stones and no one knew!!! " Were you getting updates from the aids when you visited? At what period of time did you learn of these complications?

As to kidney stones, I believe (and correct me if I'm wrong) that those can be determined through different testing methods. Were any of these diagnoses in the discharge papers when she came from a hospital, or had she been at this facility for some time?

Sepsis acts quickly in older people. MRSA and VRE do as well. When my father was in a long term hospital, I visited him in the afternoon one day. He was cheerful, improving and doing well. By the time I got home about 45 minutes later, a nurse had left a message on voice mail indicating that his BP had plunged, he'd been seguing into unresponsiveness and was rushed to the ER. It all happened so quickly.
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Deb,
I am sorry for your loss, and such a sudden one.

I have a dear friend whose husband battled kidney cancer for years. He was so determined to not let the cancer get him. In the end, he died from septic shock...literally fine one morning, died the next morning. Of course, he was quite compromised health-wise from the cancer and all the treatments, but that's how fast he went. For my friend, it was sort of a victory. The cancer didn't get him.

I'm sorry for the pain you are feeling--seems no one passes the way we'd 'choose' for them. But your mom went quickly and that really is what they would want. Time will help heal, and trying to find a scapegoat to blame isn't healthy.

Remember the good things about life with mom. Cherish those and don't dwell on the stressful things.
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Deb and Bookluvr I am so sorry for your losses. Losing a loved one is hard enough but having it happen so suddenly makes it even more difficult to understand and accept. {{{Hugs}}}
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