*sigh*
This is the sad thread, so I guess this fits. This is about nobody I care for in particular, but about elder care in the US in general. (Everything stated below, I have had to endure higher level healthcare workers pushing back on.)
Because UTIs are a mainstay of elder co-morbidity, and pernicious to treat because immune function declines as people age, (and some old people just DO NOT follow good bathroom hygiene along with, of course, the growing prevalence of resistant organisms) there's been increased pushback on treating people that develop them. This is especially troublesome for people with dementia, because many of the diagnostic symptoms for UTI are masked by their dementia. (Such as confusion, agitation, etc.)
There's been a strong push to get 3 symptoms of UTI before even being able to send in a urine specimen for a culture. Worse yet, there's pushback from hospitals and doctors on treating people that have diagnosed organisms in their urine, if they are not experiencing acidosis, sepsis, or other diagnostic conditions associated with poor health. We are talking nasty organisms too, like VRE.
People literally have to start falling down, breaking a hip, and having heart failure from prolonged acidosis, necessitating a potentially life-ending experience in the ER, before the system here will even treat. Discovering "Surprise! It's Sepsis!" (From that UTI you fuckers would simply not help us treat, and that we've been reporting to our nursing staff FOR FUCKING MONTHS, and you guys have been shutting them down every time they ask you about it!) when people get admitted is alarmingly common.