The Final Hours Before Death

I have noticed concern by medical workers as to what to do during the hours to minutes before death. Here are some ideas to consider.  When the patient is hours to minutes before death they may be experiencing some or all of the following things. Not responding to the environment, mottled, breathing irregular, maybe breathing like a fish, slight agitation, murmuring words but not making sense. Family and significant others are gathered in anticipation of death occurring soon. What do we as professionals do to assist the family in having a positive experience?

* Consider yourself a Conductor. Your job is to be as invisible as possible
yet get everyone working together and feeling supported.

* Fear is what most in the room are experiencing. Fear of the unknown,
fear of pain, fear of what they are seeing, fear of what they think will
happen. Reassure family that what is happening is normal and natural. It
is your job to assure them nothing bad is happening, to neutralize the fear
everyone has brought to this experience.

* Knowledge reduces fear. Begin gently explaining what is happening.
“Mom is doing a good job. She is doing what she is supposed to be
doing”. Go over each thing Mom is doing and explain simply what is
happening (don’t use medical terminology, speak at a 5th grade level) and
that it is all normal. “Her breathing is 10 times a minute and her blood
Pressure is 60/40. This tells me her body is slowing down.” “This is how
you die, and she is doing just what she is supposed to be doing’”

* Explain what is going to happen next. “Mom will start breathing like a fish
breaths. Her breaths will get slower and slower until she stops, then she
may take a couple of long spaced out breaths.”

* Encourage the family and significant others to individually talk to the
person who is dying. To spend some quiet time and share their thoughts
and their goodbyes. Reassure the family that the person can hear.

* Tell the family they can lay on the bed, hold their loved one, talk to them,
cry with them.

* Music played softly is often comforting to everyone present. I would pick
music that the patient enjoyed during their life. It doesn't have to be
classical, hymns, or harps.

* This is not a medical event. You are not doing medical interventions
unless:

1. The patient’s restlessness is a danger to themselves.

2. Their congestion is excessive and positioning is not effective. Don’t
use suction but you can use a Scopolamine Patch.
(It probably won’t help, but if its causing the family distress you can try.)

3. If pain has been a part of the disease process, then continue giving
pain medication until death. If pain has not been a part of the disease
process then there is no need to give a narcotic just because the person is
approaching death. Dying itself is not painful, disease causes pain.

4. If respirations are severely labored due to the disease process,
then you can use small amounts of morphine. Remember as death
approaches congestion and labored breathing are normal.

* This is a challenging time for medical professionals. We are used to
fixing, to doing something. Now we are not fixing or doing. When I have
taken a person’s blood pressure for the third time and it is 60/40 that tells
me I am nervous and wanting to do something. You don’t need to know
what the blood pressure is once you have taken it the first time. You know
death is approaching and all the tools we were taught to rely on in health
care no longer apply. Education, support, and guidance are the tools we
now bring to the room.

* If labor (those hours before death) becomes long I would encourage the
family to share stories, look at scrapbooks, and reminisce while in the
room. Have a normal, natural family gathering.

* Explain that we have some control over the time that we die. If you are
with someone when they die you are there because they want you there.
If you are not, even while you tried to be, then know you were given a gift
of love and protection.

* Because we can hear and have limited control over the time that we die
we need to gently tell the person who is dying what is going on in the
room. Who is entering, who is leaving. “It is 12:00 and I am going to bed
now. I will be back in the morning. I love you. If you need to leave before I
return I understand.”

When someone is dying a gradual death from disease and is hours to
minutes from death they don't need a doctor, nurse, social worker, or even
a chaplain. They need someone who understands the normal, natural dying
process and can gently guide and support the family to help create a
sacred memory from this very sacred experience.

Something more about The Final Hours Before Death...

My book, The Eleventh Hour, details more specifically how to conduct a vigil before someone's death. It is quite helpful not only for the caregivers but the family of the dying as well.

 

Related products

49 comments

Emma

My sister Donna diagnois stage 4 breast cancer 5/16/18 6/10/18 we are saying our goodbyes.Everything has happened so fast,but the end of life stage is moving slowly. This has for her 6 remaining siblings Death has been cruel to witness.Now just want her to be released from her suffering.

Dominica

im sitting with my friend in his final hours of life. i was searching for answers and found your words. thank you for the comfort they have given me…

Alice

I am sitting with my great aunt who is 99 and passing. This is day 10 with no food or water. Being a nurse, it is beyond understanding. The hospice staff assure me that the dying process is truly a mystery. While comforting, the pain of watching your loved one dying has been the most surreal experience. Every night I go to bed eventually from shear exhaustion and somehow she endures. I’ve never felt so helpless. Grateful she is peaceful but praying she is soon freed from her tired and weak existence. Thank you for this post…feeling alone during this journey, few are comfortable being present and caring for someone as they slip away. Painful but wouldn’t and couldn’t be anywhere else.

Barbara

Dear Alice, i know this vigil is challenging. Waiting, knowing an even sadder moment will come as she finally lets go of her body is hard. Just think of her as the little chick working to get out of the shell of her body. It is what we do to be free. Love her as I know you are doing. Talk with her, tell her whatever is in your heart. You can even lay close to her if you want to. Cherish these moments. Nothing bad is happening, just very, very sad. My blessings are with you and your family. Barbara

Amy

I am currently sitting with my mother-in-law who is at the end of her life. She has stage 4 lung cancer diagnosed just over one month ago and has declined rapidly and is currently under hospice care. As sad as it will be to lose her, I know that she will be free from pain and reunited with my father-in-law whom we lost just 4 years ago to esophageal cancer. We have kept her comfortable with medications and I pray that her suffering ends soon.

1 4 5 6 7 8 10

Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published