TLC? That name is quite the sick joke. The opposite of tender, loving care.It happens all the time. I well remember a patient of mine with a spinal lymphoma who had just had surgery - aged about our age - who the nurses put on to 'TLC', which included not giving drinks or keeping her mouth clean such that on my ward round she was severely dehydrate. I said to the sister I had not recommended this and she answered that since the patient had cancer that was their policy. I pointed out that the cancer was entirely curable, at which point sister went quiet.
Some days later the lady was sitting up in bed on Christmas Day and Father Christmas came around - a short tubby bearded man full of laughs. It was her husband giving out the presents. I continued to look after her and her arthritis for another ten years or so.
In Holland it is routine for older patients they tell me. Clearly it caries but Some of the comments at the recent inquest suggest that it was thought to be OK to let Maeve die because her ME/CFS was so bad that she did not have long to live anyway. That should never have been expressed.
My wife actually did best when starving on a surgical ward run by an intelligent surgeon who she happened to have known as a trainee. He had to wangle it with admin but it worked.
But surely that doesn't happen in other diseases. No matter how likely someone is to die soon, they should stlll be provided with nutrition and hydration if they want i
According to this article the Liverpool Care Pathway was abolished in 2013, largely it seems because they realised depriving dying people of fluids was cruel.
Unfortunately I don't have a link to the whole article.
The House of Commons Health Committee held an evidence session on 28 January [2015] for its inquiry into end of life care and asked about the pathway, an integrated care tool intended to be used to improve the quality of a person’s last few days of life. However, after a series of media stories claiming that patients were drugged and deprived of fluids in their last weeks of life, and a government commissioned review found that some hospital staff had wrongly interpreted its guidance and had received poor training in its use, the NHS was ordered to stop using it last summer.
MPs asked whether the pathway was still being used in some form. Adrienne Betteley, end of life care programme lead for the charity Macmillan Cancer Support, said, “There are areas that I know that have . . . tweaked the original document, called it something else, and that’s what they are using. And that is very concerning because it will potentially remain as a tickbox exercise.”
The committee member Rosie Cooper, Labour MP for West Lancashire, asked, “If you believe that the Liverpool care pathway, by any other design, name, or practice, is going on, how do we know that the abuses, the misunderstandings, and the lack of education aren’t going on under our noses now?” Cheesley said, “Bluntly, we don’t, unless somebody identifies that it is happening or you happen to be one of the brave patients or carers who try to jump up and down and say this is what’s happening.”
Later in the session the MPs asked Norman Lamb, the health minister for care and support, about the claim that the Liverpool care pathway was still in use under another name. He said, “It shouldn’t be used. It would be wholly wrong for a hospital, for example, just to re-badge their approach or their use of the Liverpool care pathway, call it something else, and carry on as before.”
I'm sorry you and your family suffered that treatment, Arnie Pye.
According to this article the Liverpool Care Pathway was abolished in 2013, largely it seems because they realised depriving dying people of fluids was cruel.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/jul/15/liverpool-care-pathway-independent-review
I’m confused - I thought there was already something from her? Faint memory of discussion of how she corrected the line ‘worst I’ve ever seen a patient treated’ likeI'm wondering what evidence Dr Shenton will give when she responds to the written questions posed to her by the coroner at Maeve's inquest.
What she writes will depend on the questions asked- unless she wishes to introduce her own perspective beyond that requested by the coroner. Will she be allowed to do this?
Do we know what questions the coroner has posed to Dr Shenton?
Dr Shenton presumably has views on how her patient was treated/ not treated in the hospital, and on Dr Weir's advice on treatment. Will she be asked to or choose to comment on this. Sarah ( I think it was Sarah) has already said what Dr Shenton said to her about Maeve's treatment.
I’m so sorry, that’s awfulI watched my Grandpa die just last month, in exactly the way the Liverpool pathway is described. This is in a big well known hospital here. His food was withdrawn first, even though he was at the time still able to swallow/eat small amounts. He was drinking a bottle of fortisip at a time, although he was unwell, but still they withdrew it and put him on nil by mouth. Later, as he deteriorated for several days without any food (and we were continually asking the nurses / doctors if they would actually feed him some other way), they kept fobbing us off and told us he was “very old”, and gave us the sponge with sticks. And then they withdrew water IV too, and we watched him waste away to a living skeleton state in front of our eyes.
In the end all of us - his family - knew that it was not his cancer that killed him, but starvation and dehydration that killed him quickly. At the time nothing was explained to us and they never told us what they were doing or why. So yes hospitals still do this to some patients.![]()
it is the worst thing I have ever witnessed.
a good friend of mine had to watch her mother, who had alzheimers, go thro the same in hospital.but starvation and dehydration that killed him
I’m confused - I thought there was already something from her? Faint memory of discussion of how she corrected the line ‘worst I’ve ever seen a patient treated’ like
is there more to come from this?
Yes Dr Shenton gave written replies which were covered on the last day of the inquest hearing.I remember Sarah commenting on what Dr Shenton said to her but I am more interested in how she responded to the coroner's questions....and what they were.
I too remember a bit of a sense of disappointment at something that was later attributed to Dr Shenton. Perhaps she did retract her earlier comment? My memory of the inquest is fading and I fear being too hopeful about 27th Sept.
Yes Dr Shenton gave written replies which were covered on the last day of the inquest hearing.
It was a bit disappointing so I wouldn’t bother searching it out. It was very “the whole system isn’t geared towards ME” very restrained and nothing explosive.Thank you @MrMagoo. My memory has erased all but a faint trace of that. i think I was looking for something to be hopeful about but in the process clinging on to straws. I am feeling rather gloomy today after the encouragement of the LBC and BBC Breakfast programmes.