Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — Palliative & End-of-Life

Signs of Approaching Death Chart

Dying follows a recognizable course. Each sign below pairs what you see with what it means and what the nurse does — because half the intervention at the end of life is explaining the normal to a frightened family.

Educational use only. These are typical patterns, not predictions — individual timelines vary widely, and no sign carries a schedule. Comfort interventions follow provider orders and hospice/facility protocol. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Weeks before

What You SeeWhat It MeansNursing Response
Decreased appetite and thirstThe body is downshifting; not the cause of declineOffer without forcing; teach the family that forcing intake adds distress, not days
Increasing sleep, social withdrawalEnergy conservation and natural turning inwardSchedule visits and care around alert windows; reassure family this is expected
Functional declineProgressive weaknessFalls precautions, skin protection, help with transfers while they still transfer

Days before

What You SeeWhat It MeansNursing Response
Mostly unresponsive; little or no intakeTransition into active dyingShift fully to comfort: scheduled mouth care, eye care, gentle repositioning
Decreased, dark urine outputKidneys are receiving less circulationExpected — not a fluids problem to fix; check for retention if restless
Terminal restlessness (picking, agitation)Common in the final days; sometimes reversible causesCheck bladder/bowel/pain first; calm presence; medicate per orders
BP falls; pulse rises or weakensCirculatory declineStop routine vitals per comfort-care orders; assess comfort instead

Hours before

What You SeeWhat It MeansNursing Response
Mottling — knees first, spreadingCirculation centralizing to vital organsBlankets for warmth (no heating devices); explain the color changes to family
Cheyne-Stokes respirationsCycles of deep breathing and apnea — a normal dying patternExplain before family asks; it does not signal suffering by itself
Death rattle (noisy secretions)Pooled secretions the patient can't clear; distresses families more than patientsSide-lying position, anticholinergics per orders, no deep suctioning
Unresponsive but possibly hearingHearing is believed to persist lateKeep talking to the patient; invite the family to say what they need to say

Exam Traps

  • Cheyne-Stokes, mottling, and the rattle in a comfort-care patient call for explanation and comfort measures — not rapid response or suctioning.
  • Decreased intake is part of dying; IV fluids and forced feeding are usually wrong answers at this stage.
  • Mottling starts in the knees and extremities — a classic recognition item.
  • Hearing persists: keep talking, and coach the family to.
  • Terminal restlessness → rule out urinary retention and pain before sedating.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with National Consensus Project (NCP) Clinical Practice Guidelines · Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association (HPNA). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →