Anonymous wrote:WTF is with a doctor who doesn’t give the patient the diagnosis but gets all clandestine with her DH about it?
Is this 1961?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me absolutely irate that this country does not more easily/readily allow for physician assisted suicide.
Unfortunately the slippery slope is real. Canada is expanding their program to include mental illness rather than only terminal diseases. I can easily see the process being corrupted in this country.
Anonymous wrote:Please please please get another opinion. I know someone who was told he has Alzheimer’s and he suffered with knowing that. That was almost 10 years ago and he definitely has dementia but it’s not Alzheimer’s- he knows who all of his family is and he can still speak, eat and drink.
Make sure all paperwork is in order and someone has POA. Also make sure everything is ready in case something happens to your FIL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Dad had Alzheimer's. So did his dad before him. I'm well aware of what this disease brings and I know that chances are it's coming for me.
I don't think it is wrong to keep the diagnosis from your MIL. It would clearly cause stress since it's what she has feared for a while.
It's a sad and slow decline (or it was for my family) but medically assisted suicide, especially in the early stages seems over the top.
It's attitudes like yours that keep patients in unimaginable suffering. Just because you saw the disease from the outside doesn't mean you felt what it was like inside. You cannot take someone's right to die away from them. But maybe you don't accept that a sentient adult has the right to make that decision? Is Christianity and the sin of suicide blinding you to that fact?
Studies conducted on self-administered pain medication show that end-stage patients who are given the ability to regulate their own dosage of morphine don't take more of it, and don't abuse it... but they report feeling more at peace and less in pain. It's because they are given control over their pain. I am convinced that passing laws to make assisted suicide easier, and making it widely available, even for early dementia diagnoses, won't increase the suicide rate by much. It will make patients more at peace with their decision not to kill themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone thinks they would off themselves because everyone thinks they would be like their normal selves trapped inside a declining brain. But actually that brain is you, so the person still feels like themselves a lot of the time, basically until they get stuck or fall into a “hole.” Like realizing they can’t find the car keys and it’s because the car got taken away five years ago. A lot of care giving is just gently turning people away from holes all day long and helping them feel like themselves as much as possible.
Anonymous wrote:My Dad had Alzheimer's. So did his dad before him. I'm well aware of what this disease brings and I know that chances are it's coming for me.
I don't think it is wrong to keep the diagnosis from your MIL. It would clearly cause stress since it's what she has feared for a while.
It's a sad and slow decline (or it was for my family) but medically assisted suicide, especially in the early stages seems over the top.
think FIL has been covering for MIL for months to years - just heard the story about her getting lost, for instance. Agree with PP that MIL is well within Stage 1 and declining rapidly.
Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me absolutely irate that this country does not more easily/readily allow for physician assisted suicide.