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If you’re watching this because someone you love is in ICU right now — and you’re being told there’s “no hope” — this video is for you. If your loved one is on a ventilator, on BiPAP, on TPN and the team is talking about hospice or “comfort care”… but your loved one is still awake, still responding, still fighting — you need to hear this. In this video, I explain exactly how you can take your loved one home from ICU on a ventilator — step by step. This episode was inspired by a real family. An 86-year-old mother in ICU. Strokes. Lung cancer. BiPAP. TPN. Atrial fibrillation. The ICU team was pessimistic. Hospice was being pushed. But she said: “Give me back the mask.” And she said she wants to go home. So the question becomes — is that possible? The answer is yes. If it’s done properly. If Your Loved One Is in ICU Right Now, Here’s What You Need to Know: You can take someone home on: • BiPAP or CPAP (non-invasive ventilation) • Tracheostomy ventilation (invasive ventilation) • TPN (IV nutrition) • Central lines (PICC, Hickman’s, Ports) • IV antibiotics and fluids • Cough assist devices • Full 24/7 ICU-level nursing care But there are critical steps that must happen first. In this video, we break down the 8 essential steps: 1️⃣ Understanding the type of ventilation 2️⃣ Making sure the condition is stable (not perfect — stable) 3️⃣ Securing 24/7 critical care trained nurses 4️⃣ Getting the right equipment — including backup ventilators 5️⃣ Sorting funding early (NDIS, TAC, DVA, private, self-funding) 6️⃣ Building a proper transition team 7️⃣ Preparing the home safely 8️⃣ Establishing monitoring and emergency protocols This is not about cutting corners. This is not about “hoping for the best.” This is about replicating ICU-level care at home safely. If your loved one is: • Still communicating • Still making decisions • Still asking to go home • Still choosing the mask • Still fighting Then you have every right to explore home intensive care. Prolonged ICU stays increase the risk of hospital-acquired infections. Home mechanical ventilation has been used safely for decades in countries like Germany and Australia — with the right team in place. If you are in Australia and want to know whether your loved one can come home safely. Book a free strategy call and let’s look at your situation properly. 🌐 https://intensivecareathome.com 🌐 https://intensivecarehotline.com Don’t assume ICU is the only option. If they’re still here… There may still be a way home.