When my dad had a stroke I stayed with him all night. He was admitted at about 1 in the afternoon after showing up for a doctor's appointment and someone realizing he had just had a stroke. Anyway, I got to the hospital within 30 minutes and stayed with him for the next 30 hours or so. |
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Families are so different.
My nephew was born at 28 weeks, on oxygen. My sister had preeclampsia. Her retired in-laws were on vacation for six weeks in Florida and didn’t come back. People in hospitals need advocates. When my parents in their 80s are in hospital, we three kids stay over night when allowed. Nurses are so over worked! |
+1 |
You can't stay with someone in the ICU... And they have three "young" kids, but Grandma is in her 90s. I guess this could be the second family. |
What is wrong with you? Here's a hospital I Googled that allows overnight ICU visitors: https://www.cedars-sinai.org/covid-19/preparing-your-visit/visitor-policy-updates.html "Intensive Care Units: Two visitors per day, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. One overnight visitor allowed if the visitor is registered, onsite and with the patient before 8 p.m." Not OP |
| Your MIL is 91 and you have 3 young children? Are you young enough to be your husband’s child? |
I was wondering that too, but then OP revealed in a follow-up post that she has a 16-year-old. Which is not a "young child", but of course, she could have an infant and toddler at home as well. How old is the husband/son of the 91-year-old? |
People make up incredibly specific, banal scenarios on DCUM all the time. The moderator on the Website Feedback board confirms them. Sorry you lack imagination. “Whatever!” |
So all you wanted was for people to coddle you and tell you how right and how affronted you are. Well, you should have said that upfront and saved people a bunch of time.
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You are reading too much into this. I’m the distant relative and when my dad had his first stroke, I took the wait and see approach. When he had the second, I was in the hospital for 4 days and nights relieving my brothers, and was there every week after that. What good would it have done for me to rush down and all of us be exhausted? They handled it and then tapped me in so they could attend to their work and families. Then I left and did the same.. Parental health issues are a marathon, not a sprint. The best case scenarios have people working as a team and not keeping score of who is where at what time.
I hope her stroke is mild. Prognosis for these things is generally wait-and-see as the full scope can only be known over time. Don’t burn yourself out, or burn bridges, so soon. It could be a long road. |
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My mother had a stroke, precovid, in her late 60s. I drove up to be with her, but then my local brother did not and went to work. (I'm the breadwinner in my mom and have two children at home). Guess what? I totally understood! I was there! He would have additional duties once I left.
I agree that it is important to have someone in the hospital with a patient who has suffered a brain injury. But those rooms are crowded, I don't think it's very beneficial to have everyone sitting around burning leave to hold vigil in the ICU. We had a 2 person limit, precovid. Many stroke patients need assistance and time after the hospital stay, and it's good to make people are thinking of that time period too. |
In context, she's referring to children living at home vs. the BIL who has a child living on his own quite a distance from where BIL lives. |
He might be 50 and she might be 40 and still able to have very young children. What’s wrong with you people and your judgment? |
+1 to this. |
I wouldn't at all expect my BIL to visit if something happened - and he's a doctor! Nor vice versa. We are all several states away, I'd expect that whoever was closest would take the first round keep everyone posted, and depending on how it went, if it seemed like a turn for the worst, or a discharge home with help required, then we'd talk about what's needed. |