Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You call the hospice or doctor and they will call emt and they will call funeral home. Best to make a plan in advance though. I’m sorry.
You want hospice to call. Otherwise it has to be treated as potential crime/foul play and no one needs that. Good luck and thank you for being a caring friend.
WTH - this isn't accurate right? When my grandfather died, even though we had hospice, we called the crematorium directly. No one came out and investigated a crime. Has anyone heard of this happening?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called hospice and they came over, then we called the funeral home. I will say that hospice's #1 priority was confiscating all meds. It was sort of crazy because it was 3am in the morning and everyone is crying, but hospice kept hunting meds.
God forbid I ever have to deal with hospice, but if I do, they’re not “confiscating” anything without a badge, a gun or a court order. I understand the concern about diversion. I also understand that transferring certain pharmaceuticals might be construed as distribution. I am capable of destroying things myself and would be happy to let them watch and facilitate. One of the issues with some hospice programs is the doctrinaire, controlling, even domineering, character of certain of their personnel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called hospice and they came over, then we called the funeral home. I will say that hospice's #1 priority was confiscating all meds. It was sort of crazy because it was 3am in the morning and everyone is crying, but hospice kept hunting meds.
God forbid I ever have to deal with hospice, but if I do, they’re not “confiscating” anything without a badge, a gun or a court order. I understand the concern about diversion. I also understand that transferring certain pharmaceuticals might be construed as distribution. I am capable of destroying things myself and would be happy to let them watch and facilitate. One of the issues with some hospice programs is the doctrinaire, controlling, even domineering, character of certain of their personnel.
I haven't found that to be the case at all, and have worked with four different hospice providers for close relatives. Clearly, you had a poor provider experience to have such a strong reaction.
Anonymous wrote:You call the hospice or doctor and they will call emt and they will call funeral home. Best to make a plan in advance though. I’m sorry.
You want hospice to call. Otherwise it has to be treated as potential crime/foul play and no one needs that. Good luck and thank you for being a caring friend.
Anonymous wrote:We called hospice and they came over, then we called the funeral home. I will say that hospice's #1 priority was confiscating all meds. It was sort of crazy because it was 3am in the morning and everyone is crying, but hospice kept hunting meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We called hospice and they came over, then we called the funeral home. I will say that hospice's #1 priority was confiscating all meds. It was sort of crazy because it was 3am in the morning and everyone is crying, but hospice kept hunting meds.
God forbid I ever have to deal with hospice, but if I do, they’re not “confiscating” anything without a badge, a gun or a court order. I understand the concern about diversion. I also understand that transferring certain pharmaceuticals might be construed as distribution. I am capable of destroying things myself and would be happy to let them watch and facilitate. One of the issues with some hospice programs is the doctrinaire, controlling, even domineering, character of certain of their personnel.
Anonymous wrote:We called hospice and they came over, then we called the funeral home. I will say that hospice's #1 priority was confiscating all meds. It was sort of crazy because it was 3am in the morning and everyone is crying, but hospice kept hunting meds.
Anonymous wrote:We called hospice and they came over, then we called the funeral home. I will say that hospice's #1 priority was confiscating all meds. It was sort of crazy because it was 3am in the morning and everyone is crying, but hospice kept hunting meds.