I am POA for my 100-year-old mother. She asked for a DNR order probably 5 years or so ago. She had lived a long life, she was a tired person of faith, and she was ready to go when the time came. That was fine for me as a hypothetical decision. And then she got COVID-19 as a still otherwise pretty healthy 100-year-old.
It was gut wrenching when the facility called me to re-affirm the DNR order in case the COVID progressed. I found it a lot harder to be ready to implement now that it was more real than hypotethical. I was fortunate that she was still coherent and could have a conversation with me about the possible outcomes of COVID-19 to reaffirm her DNR wish. I recorded our phone call for my siblings who were wavering on the order. It was a lonely decision because it would be mine in the end, not theirs. Mom survived COVID-19 months ago. I know how hard it is to think about and I'm glad the order was not needed for her. She is now in the final days of her life and will slip away peacefully and naturally, a course that cannot be reversed.
I realize for me, it was all about my not being ready to let go. But, it's not about me. These are tough things, nonetheless, because you are now involved in a loved one's death in a way you might not be under other circumstances. I give my sympathies to care givers involved in such decisions. May God bless them.