(My guest opinion column that ran today (Sunday, Feb.4) in the Arizona Daily Star.)
    
    
 
  Sure,
 I’m dying. But aren’t we all? As Bob Dylan says, “He not busy being 
born is busy dying.” Or as David Fitzsimmons of the Star says, 
“Mortality sucks.” And sure, I entered hospice care recently. But I hope
 you won’t be reading my obituary right away.
  The
 thing is, I have a problem with hospitals. Often, when I go to one of 
them, I end up with something much worse than what I had when I went 
there.
  Example
 No. 1: Last October, I went to the hospital with a broken ankle. I was 
supposed to only be there overnight, until I could be treated by an 
orthopedic surgeon. But in that space of time, I came down with 
pneumonia, which required a month of antibiotic infusions in a skilled 
nursing facility.
  Example No. 
2: A year ago, I went to the hospital with a
possible congestive heart 
failure — serious enough in its own right. But within a day or two, I 
had picked up a major case of pneumonia with MRSA complication, which 
nearly killed me. That required two months of treatment in a care 
center.
|  | 
| Tom Walker | 
  Example No. 3: Five 
years ago, I had heart surgery — very serious. And I was doing fine and 
was supposed to go home after a week. But then the doctors discovered 
that my old friend, pneumonia, had taken up residence in my lungs. And 
that led to further complications and an extra month in the hospital.
  Granted,
 I’m not an innocent bystander in all this. My roughly 40 years of 
smoking have made me susceptible to disease. But after six bouts of 
pneumonia, my lungs are pretty much ruined.
  So I’ve gone into home hospice care 
to stay away from those germy hospitals. While I still have some lung 
function left, I want to stay at home, with a nurse stopping by 
regularly. Hospice is actually a survival technique for me.
  My
 daughter, Christina Walker Rowden, is the volunteer coordinator for 
Hospice Family Care, my hospice agency. In response to my many 
well-wishers on social media — some of whom were saddened by the news 
that I was in hospice care — Christina has come up with the “Top 5 
Reasons Not to be Sad that my Dad is on Hospice.” Here we go:
  1)
 He’s not sad about it. While he is not happy about having the 
conditions that mean he qualifies for it, he’s actually quite glad to be
 on hospice, because of the next few reasons.
    
  2)
 For the first time in quite a while, he stayed out of the hospital 
after contracting a serious cold. By consulting with his hospice nurse 
on his symptoms and possible treatments, they took care of that sucker 
without delay.
  3) He’s still 
doing the things he enjoys (like writing, eating out, watching movies 
with my Mom), but with the added benefit of attention from a team whose 
job is to make sure his concerns are addressed, with him guiding his own
 care.
  4) His family has 
support, too. At any time of day or night, he and my Mom can call for 
help or to ask questions. And I can be at work, or in my home 45 minutes
 away, and rest assured that his care team is looking out for them when I
 can’t be there.
  5) He is 
really smart. He has paid for this Medicare benefit his whole working 
life, and is now utilizing it sooner, rather than later, when it will 
really help him enjoy his life and live it the way he wants to.
Tom Walker is a retired journalist. He worked at the Arizona Daily Star and now writes novels and blogs.
   
Tom Walker is a retired journalist. He worked at the Arizona Daily Star and now writes novels and blogs.
 
 
 
 
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