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HiPointDem

(20,729 posts)
119. show me the post where someone says "they should give cpr even if the person has a dnr order".
Wed Mar 6, 2013, 02:17 AM
Mar 2013

show me the posts saying 'everyone should be given cpr even if they don't want it."


The complaint is about the fact that this facility and this corporation, as a matter of policy, refuses CPR to EVERYONE in their independent living facility, whether they have a dnr order or not.

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How about the Shocker Pad Box? MADem Mar 2013 #1
One of the doctors addressed that, too. He's only 66, though -- much younger than the CA lady. pnwmom Mar 2013 #3
I don't think the defibrillators work if the heart is stopped. FarCenter Mar 2013 #5
But a heart could be beating irregularly and very slowly -- pnwmom Mar 2013 #8
No. An electronic shock device can detect bradycardia (slow heart beat) and respond appropriately. Aristus Mar 2013 #61
A defibrillator doesn't start the heart, it stops it. Warpy Mar 2013 #102
I have to say, I look askance at this "Let 'em die" guidance. MADem Mar 2013 #112
I don't have a single elderly relative who relished the idea of life so much pnwmom Mar 2013 #120
what your family wants is irrelevant. and the fact that *this* woman had a DNR is irrelevant to HiPointDem Mar 2013 #127
Well, I guess the point I'm trying to make is that it's fine and dandy MADem Mar 2013 #134
Perhaps it is true that pnwmom Mar 2013 #210
Yet this 66 year old doctor WANTS emergency aid. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #128
Just a few weeks ago I administered chest compressions marybourg Mar 2013 #2
I'm happy it worked out for you! pnwmom Mar 2013 #4
If my heart stops, I'll take the 20% of survival and broken ribs aikoaiko Mar 2013 #6
I would say that for me at my age now but I wouldn't at 87. pnwmom Mar 2013 #10
Especially if it includes more pain and suffering. n/t cui bono Mar 2013 #43
It depends entirely on health--I know people in their eighties and nineties who are still vigorous. MADem Mar 2013 #115
I'm with you. WHEN I change my mind I'll say so elehhhhna Mar 2013 #50
Could it be . . . Brigid Mar 2013 #7
I read that in CA an assisted living place has to have a special license to administer any kind pnwmom Mar 2013 #13
i doubt it; it was a facility with 3 levels of care & took public funding. ergo, it could give HiPointDem Mar 2013 #62
You're wrong. You can't take staff away from the licensed facility pnwmom Mar 2013 #81
It's the *same* facility, providing 3 levels of care on the same campus. we have similar facilities HiPointDem Mar 2013 #99
I think it is wrong for the facility to take that stance liberal_at_heart Mar 2013 #15
CA law requires a special license for a retirement facility to offer any kind of medical care. pnwmom Mar 2013 #17
why can't they get the required licence? liberal_at_heart Mar 2013 #23
Then it would be an assisted living facility, not a retirement home. pnwmom Mar 2013 #26
If you have residence in their 80's they are going to need medical assistance. liberal_at_heart Mar 2013 #27
Lots of people live independently in their own homes in their 80's without medical assistance. pnwmom Mar 2013 #32
I still think retirement homes should have CPR certified staff and should offer CPR to those who liberal_at_heart Mar 2013 #36
As I said, that's the case for WA retirement homes. pnwmom Mar 2013 #39
This message was self-deleted by its author HiPointDem Mar 2013 #114
Completely false, though you keep repeating it. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #116
as for your claim that it's different in wash, it looks like this corp has the same policy here: HiPointDem Mar 2013 #121
If you want the increased services you have to move to that section. dkf Mar 2013 #205
they don't need a license to give emergency aid. that is corporate policy, and this poster is HiPointDem Mar 2013 #126
CPR is not medical care Thor_MN Mar 2013 #52
CA law treats it as medical care and requires an license for it to be administered. pnwmom Mar 2013 #78
Care to prove that a random person adminstering CPR had knowledge of the DNR order? Thor_MN Mar 2013 #93
bullshit. you keep repeating that california law forbids independent living facilities to give HiPointDem Mar 2013 #117
that's rather misleading. every assisted living or skilled nursing facility is licensed to give HiPointDem Mar 2013 #63
What is misleading? The woman lived in independent living, not assisted living or skilled nursing pnwmom Mar 2013 #80
All the staff works for the same corporation. Anyone can give cpr in an emergency. No criminal HiPointDem Mar 2013 #100
No, employees of a non-licensed independent care facility in CA may not give CPR. pnwmom Mar 2013 #103
Employees can't because the facility forbids it. The family's wishes in this case make a great deal HiPointDem Mar 2013 #108
The law could easily be changed to require it and that's what should happen. n/t pnwmom Mar 2013 #110
The law does not forbid it. It's the facility's *interpretation* of the law. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #111
no. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #139
I think it is their choice. enlightenment Mar 2013 #9
I agree. n/t pnwmom Mar 2013 #14
I thought that another reason to administer CPR was to circulate oxygen oregonjen Mar 2013 #11
Yes, in the hopes that doctors could get the heart working again. pnwmom Mar 2013 #19
You are correct. My cpr instructor discussed a case where a group took turns performing cpr FSogol Mar 2013 #55
'let them die'. they're old and useless. i'd say that's the general sentiment. however, i guess HiPointDem Mar 2013 #65
I was a CPR instructor for EMS personnel nadinbrzezinski Mar 2013 #86
Upthread I posted a link to a situation where a bunch of people kept going for ninety six minutes. MADem Mar 2013 #195
rather vigorously promoting it. to the extent of pushing false information and straw men. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #201
Let them die. Why risk broken ribs? Buzz Clik Mar 2013 #12
How about "let them choose" before they're in that situation? pnwmom Mar 2013 #16
Sounds like a wise plan. Buzz Clik Mar 2013 #18
Same here. Mom posted her wishes on the wall by her phone; mother in law would never ever discuss... Hekate Mar 2013 #56
Sorry you had to go through that. pnwmom Mar 2013 #89
Had a terrible fight with a friend over the issue of the feeding tube Hekate Mar 2013 #94
"First, do no harm." bemildred Mar 2013 #20
What dogma? pnwmom Mar 2013 #22
The dogma that says you must give CPR to the elderly to "revive" them. bemildred Mar 2013 #25
I know of a woman who died at the age of 105 pnwmom Mar 2013 #29
Yes. bemildred Mar 2013 #31
It's not just money Warpy Mar 2013 #107
How horrible! No CPR--standard? The "default?" Do you really mean that? MADem Mar 2013 #138
Yeah, I'm 68 and I really mean that. bemildred Mar 2013 #150
Well, if "no CPR" is the default, someone else IS deciding when you die. MADem Mar 2013 #188
Have you ever cared for an 85 year old with a chest full of broken ribs Warpy Mar 2013 #177
I'm sorry. I just don't buy that logic. I think it's pretty awful, actually. MADem Mar 2013 #186
You might have read my whole post, you know Warpy Mar 2013 #187
Well, I did read your post, and not every case--see the examples I provided, that you did not read-- MADem Mar 2013 #189
and i know a woman who died at 98 and spent the last years of her life taking a daily walk around HiPointDem Mar 2013 #66
So . . . pnwmom Mar 2013 #76
I agree, every case is individual. That's why the blanket policy that no emergency aid will be HiPointDem Mar 2013 #101
Why is it wrong if residents are fully informed and consenting, as this woman's family said she was? pnwmom Mar 2013 #109
It's fine if they are. It's fine in this woman's case. It's not fine to have a blanket policy HiPointDem Mar 2013 #122
I agree--the "default" should be to give care, not to refuse to give it. MADem Mar 2013 #143
Reminds me of my neighbor's mother. Just the same, minus the driving. MADem Mar 2013 #141
"Revive" them. Yeah, I'm sure they're pissed off about being "alive." GaYellowDawg Mar 2013 #136
So I hit a nerve, eh? nt bemildred Mar 2013 #149
A consequence of posting something so thoroughly unfeeling. GaYellowDawg Mar 2013 #153
Name calling isn't much of an argument either. nt bemildred Mar 2013 #154
the poster didn't call you any names. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #155
I didn't say he did. I said he made no argument, he just used insults. nt bemildred Mar 2013 #156
he made an argument. his argument was that your scare quotes around 'revive,' as though HiPointDem Mar 2013 #159
Those are "bullshit" quotes. When the "success" rate is 20% for an otherwise harmful treatment, bemildred Mar 2013 #161
the success rate is 20% for everyone. so i presume you are against cpr for anyone, since the HiPointDem Mar 2013 #163
Presume away, I don't give a shit what you presume. Go read post #157. nt bemildred Mar 2013 #164
Here, read this: bemildred Mar 2013 #162
i read it. what golden nuggets am i supposed to draw from it? it pushes a red herring, in HiPointDem Mar 2013 #166
The corporations policiies differed by facility. There were nearby facilites where CPR is done. bemildred Mar 2013 #167
bullshit. you don't even know the basic facts of the case. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #169
So the families statement means nothing to you? Got it. bemildred Mar 2013 #170
The family's statement has nothing to do with the issue in this case, which is not the fate of this HiPointDem Mar 2013 #172
I will talk about any issue I choose here. bemildred Mar 2013 #173
it's obviously is not your only issue, as you've posted that you'd like to see "no cpr" as HiPointDem Mar 2013 #174
Yeah, I like to kill puppies too: bemildred Mar 2013 #179
By the way, can you post a link to the statement you claim I made? bemildred Mar 2013 #180
In response to this post: HiPointDem Mar 2013 #181
Ah, I meant for me, no physicians should not make those decisions Edit: unilaterally. nt bemildred Mar 2013 #182
i accept that you may have meant only yourself. however, the question is about the standard HiPointDem Mar 2013 #183
Yes, that's what it says there. bemildred Mar 2013 #184
i see a great deal wrong with the largest corporate provider of 'senior living' requiring that you HiPointDem Mar 2013 #203
But that is not the case. There is no such requirement, nobody is compelled. nt bemildred Mar 2013 #207
The family's comments shouldn't be controlling anyway. This woman lived independently. MADem Mar 2013 #197
You can break every rib I've got if it might save my life. Codeine Mar 2013 #21
How many 80 or 90 somethings do you think would say that, pnwmom Mar 2013 #24
The two 80-90s I know. Hatchling Mar 2013 #59
Then they should be glad that it was this woman's decision to live in this place pnwmom Mar 2013 #77
"beats the shit outta dying" jberryhill Mar 2013 #28
You have to think about the underlying cause. I tell my hospice patients and their mucifer Mar 2013 #30
These issues are so complicated and that's why pnwmom Mar 2013 #34
yet this corporation has a BLANKET POLICY that decides for everyone. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #124
I also heard that your body fights any respiratory machine. cui bono Mar 2013 #45
Yes, they usually have to sedate people at least at first. mucifer Mar 2013 #47
Yeah, and sometimes even paralyze! cui bono Mar 2013 #53
To get the tube down we used paralytic s nadinbrzezinski Mar 2013 #105
Just listened to that a few days ago. It really gave me a lot to think about on this subject. DeschutesRiver Mar 2013 #168
I had to do the Heimlich at home this morning before work. postulater Mar 2013 #33
The weird thing is that I've done that myself. Codeine Mar 2013 #35
Wow. pnwmom Mar 2013 #37
Not sure if you're kidding or not, but I used to have to watch my dog eat as he had cui bono Mar 2013 #51
Not kidding. Just lucky I was there or she'd be dead now. postulater Mar 2013 #73
My heart stopped 9 times Kingofalldems Mar 2013 #38
Yay! pnwmom Mar 2013 #40
After reading th OP I am even more amazed that I am still around. Kingofalldems Mar 2013 #71
You were definitely a success story, and doctors and nurses never become immune pnwmom Mar 2013 #75
I'm glad CPR worked for you. liberal_at_heart Mar 2013 #48
I know from experience that when your heart stops Kingofalldems Mar 2013 #69
Yeah, but are you 87 years old? JustABozoOnThisBus Mar 2013 #148
That's why 80% of doctors DO NOT want CPR performed on them. cui bono Mar 2013 #41
How can you possibly know if the medical crisis you are going through is fatal? liberal_at_heart Mar 2013 #44
There are statistics as to the success of certain prodedures, and that's why the doctors answered cui bono Mar 2013 #46
If you are suffering from terminal cancer you HOPE it might be fatal. pnwmom Mar 2013 #83
link to that study, please? no, not to the radio show, to the study. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #68
Frontline had a program called Living Old a few years back Revanchist Mar 2013 #42
Thanks for the link. pnwmom Mar 2013 #84
When my FIL was in a nursing home they had to ask us about a DNR Hekate Mar 2013 #49
when my mother was frail, ill and 94 years old, I refused to have her transferred to another CTyankee Mar 2013 #54
people should make their own decisions about what they want, and review them yearly. the HiPointDem Mar 2013 #72
No, of course not. My mother was extremely old and frail at that point. She was essentially starving CTyankee Mar 2013 #74
I agree, you did the right thing by your mother. But my larger point is that not everyone living in HiPointDem Mar 2013 #98
I never said it should be everyone's decision. depends on circumstances... CTyankee Mar 2013 #131
i didn't mean to imply that you did. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #132
The family said they and the woman knew what the policy was, and she wanted to die a natural death. pnwmom Mar 2013 #90
I understand this family said the woman didn't want cpr. I did not see any statement that she HiPointDem Mar 2013 #97
Even making your own decision ahead of time isn't always adequate. A DNR doesn't guarantee... JVS Mar 2013 #175
another reason blanket policies made by corporations = wrong HiPointDem Mar 2013 #176
If you have a living will or a health care proxy you can direct a DNR order. n/t pnwmom Mar 2013 #82
Putting the discussion to the side, reflection Mar 2013 #165
I just turned 50, feel free to break my ribs. Thor_MN Mar 2013 #57
I've known about this for a long time ... but ... REP Mar 2013 #58
Right -- every decision depends on the person and circumstances. n/t pnwmom Mar 2013 #91
Absolutely. More information = more informed decisions REP Mar 2013 #160
An anti-CPR thread. WilliamPitt Mar 2013 #60
Simply stunning. Egalitarian Thug Mar 2013 #64
It's not an "anti-CPR thread. LisaL Mar 2013 #67
Thanks, Lisa, that's what it is. pnwmom Mar 2013 #87
There are a lot of posters on this site and on this thread who don't want anyone to make choices. AnotherMcIntosh Mar 2013 #104
And I think a lot of them might be younger people pnwmom Mar 2013 #106
I am not a younger person. I am an older person who has watched many people die and works HiPointDem Mar 2013 #123
I am no spring chicken myself, and I have a lot of "geezer" friends/acquaintances. MADem Mar 2013 #144
I agree that this meme is being shopped, and that's why this thread pisses me off so much. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #146
I'm thinking my older friends will prefer to just stay in their homes and rely on the "I've fallen MADem Mar 2013 #147
actually, i think everyone is fine with people making choices, but against corporations making HiPointDem Mar 2013 #113
"everyone is fine with people making choices"? How could you think that if you've read the posts? AnotherMcIntosh Mar 2013 #118
show me the post where someone says "they should give cpr even if the person has a dnr order". HiPointDem Mar 2013 #119
In this case the daughter confirmed that her mother did not have a DNR order pinboy3niner Mar 2013 #129
IN THIS CASE. The facility is lying when it says the nurse did not understand their policies HiPointDem Mar 2013 #130
If that's what they want, why should CPR be forced on them? LisaL Mar 2013 #198
where do you see me saying anything like that? HiPointDem Mar 2013 #199
Um, no. GaYellowDawg Mar 2013 #137
What???? It's an everybody-needs-to-make-their-own-decision thread. pnwmom Mar 2013 #85
If CPR does not succeed broken ribs do not matter. MineralMan Mar 2013 #70
Her family says she didn't want intervention. LisaL Mar 2013 #79
If they'd done that to MY mother after she'd said not to, she'd have sued them blind afterward Hekate Mar 2013 #95
I was not there, nor do I know that woman's wishes. MineralMan Mar 2013 #152
The person in cardiac arrest was in a position to say what she wanted pnwmom Mar 2013 #88
But did she do that? I don't know. MineralMan Mar 2013 #151
Her family said on Tuesday she was fully aware of the policies of the independent living facility pnwmom Mar 2013 #185
I remember reading a very touching essay about CPR in a nursing journal many years ago. Silver Swan Mar 2013 #92
no, it's not done to 'comfort' the survivors. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #142
The system makes it impossible for anyone to know the truth kickysnana Mar 2013 #96
20% is better than 0%. Apophis Mar 2013 #125
Thanks, but for serious advice like this, I'll trust my own doctor... Violet_Crumble Mar 2013 #133
Well, what the fuck? GaYellowDawg Mar 2013 #135
+100. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #140
+1 nt MADem Mar 2013 #145
turn off the lights datasuspect Mar 2013 #158
This woman wanted to die naturally. LisaL Mar 2013 #196
But she *had it* done on her, by the EMTs. So apparently this facility didn't bother to tell them HiPointDem Mar 2013 #204
Coincidentally, I just listened to a podcast covering the same thing DeschutesRiver Mar 2013 #157
Thanks for your link and post, DR. pnwmom Mar 2013 #194
Thanks for that link as well re family statement. Although these threads have Terry Schiavo aspects DeschutesRiver Mar 2013 #208
In WA state we copied that law of yours and so that's an option here, too. pnwmom Mar 2013 #209
I did not know that WA had done the same DeschutesRiver Mar 2013 #211
If I'm dead, I won't care about cracked ribs. Go for it! JVS Mar 2013 #171
If you're 87 and it only gives you a couple more weeks of life, you might regret it. pnwmom Mar 2013 #192
and you might not. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #202
Hell yes. I'll take a 1 in 5 chance over no chance, anytime and anywhere. (nt) w4rma Mar 2013 #178
Me, too. But I won't want it when I'm 87. n/t pnwmom Mar 2013 #191
After years of TV watching (where it almost always seems to work), hughee99 Mar 2013 #190
They're only an issue if you would rather have a relatively peaceful death than a violent one. n/t pnwmom Mar 2013 #193
hogwash. there is no guarantee of a peaceful death. HiPointDem Mar 2013 #200
People need to realize that if you are frail, CPR is very painful. dkf Mar 2013 #206
Even less than that... Javaman Mar 2013 #212
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»CPR can crack ribs and on...»Reply #119