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how did they know I was in the hospital??Rating: (votes: 9) When my Mom had a stroke and was not verbal, the firemen were able to look in her purse (this was 1986 before cell phones) and find my number. (She was able to call 911 but couldn't speak to the operator so they went ahead and sent out a police officer and he found her down after breaking down the door. Maybe the fireman or whoever found her was able to get the info from something in the house?? Comment:
Did you list your MOM as an emergency contact when your were admitted. Had you mentioned that you MOM should be allowed to be admitted to visit you? Had your MoM ever been at this facility and listed you as the next of kin? When you gave birth you list your maiden name......was that the same as your Mom? Did you Mom's PCP know you were about to or had just given birth? Did a neighbor at the scene tell the EMS or police that her daughter was in XYZ hospital and just had a baby. Who called EMS? Who brought her to the ED? As an ED nurse there are MANY ways we obtain information and utilize the police department to question neighbors. Police will also use telephone/address books to locate next of kin....hit redial on the phone or cell phone and talk to whomever answers.........there are many ways they figured it out......I'm sorry for your lossheartbeat
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I've seen things like this happen before, but I'm from a teeny-tiny town. Any chance this was just one of those "everybody knows everybody" scenarios?
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Yeah, I totally understand that they could have found my number in her purse...but, they knew that I was hospitalized. When my husband got the call they didn't ask for me, they already knew that I wasn't there. It has always bothered me that "if" she was able to tell them this information, what else did she say to them? My mom and I were VERY close. Since she lived alone, anytime she felt sick or lonely I went to her house to sit with her...even in the middle of the night. It still bothers me that she was alone during her passing. I would have been there if I wasn't in the hospital. I'm sorry, this is just me venting my emotions. I have never really moved past this, even though it's been over 2 years. It's just always bothered me that I wasn't there for her last words, and it makes me wonder if she did tell them where I was...what else she might have said. I know that those questions will probebly never be answered, and that I need to move on. Sorry again, this is post is really not "nursing" related enough for me to have posted it.
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Yes, she is the one who called 911. I guess I probebly know the answer to my question...she more than likely told them. I just wasn't sure if there were other ways for them to have found out. Sorry again...it's just something I have always wondered about. Thanks for taking the time to respond
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I feel your pain. When my Mom had her last stroke, she was alone, fell, crawled to the door and when the police broke the door down, the door fell on her. That was in 1986 and I still think of it often. Don't feel bad that you want to know what happened. You were close and its only natural you would want to know. I would bet that her thoughts were of you and the new grandchild. She lives on in you and your children. Probably what makes you such an obviously caring nurse.
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Quote from Mara S.Yes, she is the one who called 911. I guess I probebly know the answer to my question...she more than likely told them. I just wasn't sure if there were other ways for them to have found out. Sorry again...it's just something I have always wondered about. Thanks for taking the time to respond
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Quote from traumaRUsI feel your pain. When my Mom had her last stroke, she was alone, fell, crawled to the door and when the police broke the door down, the door fell on her. That was in 1986 and I still think of it often. Don't feel bad that you want to know what happened. You were close and its only natural you would want to know. I would bet that her thoughts were of you and the new grandchild. She lives on in you and your children. Probably what makes you such an obviously caring nurse.
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Quote from Mara S.They had to break down the door at my mom's house too. It was very hard when I went to her house the first time, The door was broken, the coffee table was on it's side, there was tubing and some things with her blood on it from where they had worked on her. It was very difficult to be the one to clean up after. Her passing was very unexpected, she was just at the hospital the day prior to see me and the baby. She said that she felt like she was getting a cold, she called me just hours before she died to tell me that she still felt bad and that she probebly wouldn't be in to see me the next day...When I went to her house to clean up there were Christmas presents that she had wrapped for us. I found the receipt for the gifts in her purse, she had just bought them the day before she passed. We opened them on Christmas morning, that was a very hard Christmas. Anyway, thank you to everyone for letting me vent
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Are you concerned that HIPPA was broken?
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Hi: I'm very sorry for your loss, and unfortunately I know how it feels. As I read what yo wrote I revisit my Mom's passing, she was in a nursing home. She was terminally ill, but that day I worked at the Hospital willing to go to be with her after my shift.shortly before the shift ended they called me on the phone to let me know she had passed. I always think why I had to go to work and couldn't be with her instead. She passed 12 years ago, and I still miss her a lot, so don't feel sorry, and thanks for sharing, it tells me I'm not alone.
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oh bless your heart! all of you! i have not yet lost a parent but these comments are so heartbreaking. hugs to EVERYone :redpinkhe
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