November 19, NYTimes How Doctors Die: Showing Others the Way By DAN GORENSTEIN

Similar documents
Brandon, age 4, with his greyhound, Rudy. Brandon LOVED Rudy!

Making Your Wishes Known With the Help of the Five Wishes Document

When and How to Introduce Palliative Care

Talking to Your Family About End-of-Life Care

CHPCA appreciates and thanks our funding partner GlaxoSmithKline for their unrestricted funding support for Advance Care Planning in Canada.

RIGHTS OF PASSAGE A NEW APPROACH TO PALLIATIVE CARE. INSIDE Expert advice on HIV disclosure. The end of an era in Afghanistan

Advance Care Planning Communication Guide: Overview

Your life and your choices: plan ahead

S A M P L E. About CPR. Hard Choices. Logo A GUIDE FOR PATIENTS AND FAMILIES

End of life care in the acute hospital environment: Family members perspectives. Jade Odgers Manager Grampians Regional Palliative Care Team

Let s talk about Hope. Regional Hospice and Home Care of Western Connecticut

Dying well with courage and growth

Discussing Goals of Care

ADVANCE DIRECTIVES. A Guide for Patients and Their Families.

[I m] Martha Burke, Director of Social Work and Clinical Services at Brigham and Women s Hospital.

Growing Chorus Sings the Praises of Homecare and Hospice

E-Learning Module B: Assessment

ILLINOIS Advance Directive Planning for Important Health Care Decisions

Advance Care Planning Information

Planning in Advance for Future Health Care Choices Advance Care Planning Information & Guide

Hospice Care for anyone considering hospice

Advance Directive. A step-by-step guide to help you make shared health care decisions for the future. California edition

E-Learning Module B: Introduction to Hospice Palliative Care

Common Questions Asked by Patients Seeking Hospice Care

Decisions about Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)

For the fiscal year ending: JUNE COMMUNITY HEALTH IMPROVEMENT REPORT FY2015 1

HOSPICE IN MINNESOTA: A RURAL PROFILE

An individual may have one type of advance directive or may have both. They may also be combined in a single document.

Honoring Patient Wishes

Station Name: Mrs. Smith. Issue: Transitioning to comfort measures only (CMO)

Wow ADVANCE CARE PLANNING The continued Frontier. Kathryn Borgenicht, M.D. Linda Bierbach, CNP

Hospice Care For Dementia and Alzheimers Patients

A Fight for a Comfortable Death

Hospice 101. Janet Montgomery, BSN, MBA Chief Marketing Officer, Hospice of Cincinnati

Mayo Clinic Hospice. Your guide Your hospice

Advance Care Planning and Goals of Care

Your life and your choices: plan ahead

ADVANCE CARE PLANNING DOCUMENTS

Database Profiles for the ACT Index Driving social change and quality improvement

Advance Medical Directives

10/3/2016 PALLIATIVE CARE WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF PALLIATIVE CARE DEFINITION. What, Who, Where and When

[TRACK 4: SURVIVOR STORIES: YOUR CANCER CARE PLAN/SECOND OPINIONS]

Making every moment count

Your Right to Make Health Care Decisions

Martin Nesbitt Tape 36. Q: You ve been NCNA s legislator of the year 3 times?

Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR): A Decision Aid For. Patients And Their Families

MY VOICE (STANDARD FORM)

LIFE CARE planning. Advance Health Care Directive. my values, my choices, my care WASHINGTON. kp.org/lifecareplan

Minnesota Health Care Directive Planning Toolkit

The POLST Conversation POLST Script

Appendix: Assessments from Coping with Cancer

What would you like to accomplish in the process of advance care planning and/or in completing a health care directive?

Hospice Residences. in Fraser Health

Produced by The Kidney Foundation of Canada

Health Care Directive

TO HELP EASE DECISION MAKING IN THE FUTURE ADVANCE CARE PLANNING TOOLKIT

HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVE

Bill Brown Scenario. Bea Console

Perceptions of Family Cancer Caregivers in Tanzania: A Qualitative Study. Allison Walker

Talking to Your Doctor About Hospice Care

Advance Directive: Understanding and honoring my future health care goals

munsonhealthcare.org/acp

Cutbacks in Federal Funding for Cancer Research

Advance Care Planning Workbook

California Advance Health Care Directive

MAKING YOUR WISHES KNOWN: Advance Care Planning Guide

Edna Evergreen Scenario. Lila Moore

Hospice Residences Rev. May 28, 2014 R-4. Dame Cicely Saunders (1976) Founder of modern hospice movement. Design:

Integrating Appreciative Inquiry with Storytelling: Fostering Leadership in a Healthcare Setting

Palliative Care Nursing: A Matter of Respect

ADVANCE DIRECTIVE FOR HEALTH CARE

Advance Health Care Directive MARYLAND. LIFE CARE planning my values, my choices, my care. kp.org/lifecareplan

Maple Hill Veteran s Cemetery Memorial Day Wreath Laying Ceremony 30 May 2011 LTG Formica Remarks as Presented

PENNSYLVANIA Advance Directive Planning for Important Health Care Decisions

Oncology Nurses: Providing the Support System for Cancer Care

TENNESSEE Advance Directive Planning for Important Health Care Decisions

Psychological issues in nutrition and hydration towards End of Life

ADVANCE DIRECTIVE PACKET Question and Answer Section

Dear Family Caregiver, Yes, you.

YOUR CARE, YOUR CHOICES. Advance Care Planning Conversation Guide

Using and Integrating the Serious Illness Conversation Guide

Your guide to gifts in Wills. Every family that needs one should have an Admiral Nurse

Advance Health Care Directive. LIFE CARE planning. my values, my choices, my care. kp.org/lifecareplan

Reference Understanding and Addressing Moral Distress, Epstein & Delgado, Nursing World, Sept. 30, 2010

If you have questions or concerns about the information provided in this pamphlet, please feel free to discuss it with a KGH staff member, such as

Who Will Speak for You?

Medical-Legal Partnerships. A model for integrating community services into the healthcare setting

End of life care. Patient Guide

CHOICE: MAKING KEY DECISIONS

Advance Directive for Health Care

What happens if my heart stops? DRAFT An information leaflet

ALLINA HOME & COMMUNITY SERVICES ALLINA HEALTH. Advance Care Planning. Discussion guide. Discussion Guide. Advance care planning

Chronic Critical Illness Decision Aid

Lessons On Dying. What Patients Taught Me That Was Missing From Medical School. By Amberly Orr

Thinking Ahead. My Way, My Choice, My Life at the End. Dignity. Choice Peace. Trust. Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services

Advance Health Care Planning: Making Your Wishes Known. MC rev0813

WEST VIRGINIA Advance Directive Planning for Important Health Care Decisions

ABOUT THE ADVANCE DIRECTIVE FOR RECEIVING ORAL FOOD AND FLUIDS IN DEMENTIA. Introduction

Compassion. Excellence. Reliability.

Here are some tips related to preparation, execution, and evaluation of role plays:

Transcription:

November 19, 2013. NYTimes How Doctors Die: Showing Others the Way By DAN GORENSTEIN BRAVE. You hear that word a lot when people are sick. It s all about the fight, the survival instinct, the courage. But when Dr. Elizabeth D. McKinley s family and friends talk about bravery, it is not so much about the way Dr. McKinley, a 53-year-old internist from Cleveland, battled breast cancer for 17 years. It is about the courage she has shown in doing something so few of us are able to do: stop fighting. This spring, after Dr. McKinley s cancer found its way into her liver and lungs and the tissue surrounding her brain, she was told she had two options. You can put chemotherapy directly into your brain, or total brain radiation, she recalled recently from her home in suburban Cleveland. I m looking at these drugs head-on and either one would change me significantly. I didn t want that. She also did not want to endure the side effects of radiation. What Dr. McKinley wanted was time with her husband, a radiologist, and their two college-age children, and another summer to soak her feet in the Atlantic Ocean. But most of all, she wanted a little more time being me and not being somebody else. So, she turned down more treatment and began hospice care, the point at which the medical fight to extend life gives way to creating the best quality of life for the time that is left. Dr. Robert Gilkeson, Dr. McKinley s husband, remembers his mother-in-law, Alice McKinley, being unable to comprehend her daughter s decision. Isn t there some treatment we could do here? she pleaded with me, he recalled. I almost had to bite my tongue, so I didn t say, Do you have any idea how much disease your daughter has? Dr. McKinley and her husband were looking at her disease as doctors, who know the limits of medicine; her mother was looking at her daughter s cancer as a mother, clinging to the promise of medicine as limitless.

When it comes to dying, doctors, of course, are ultimately no different from the rest of us. And their emotional and physical struggles are surely every bit as wrenching. But they have a clear advantage over many of us. They have seen death up close. They understand their choices, and they have access to the best that medicine has to offer. You have a lot of knowledge, a lot of awareness of what s likely to come, said Dr. J. Andrew Billings from his home in Cambridge, Mass. Dr. Billings, 68 and semi-retired, is an expert in palliative care, which can include managing pain, emotional support and end-of-life planning. He is also a cancer patient with a life-threatening form of lymphoma. Dr. Billings said that knowledge of what may be ahead can give doctors more control over their quality of life before they die control that eludes many of us. Research shows that most Americans do not die well, which is to say they do not die the way they say they want to at home, surrounded by the people who love them. According to data from Medicare, only a third of patients die this way. More than 50 percent spend their final days in hospitals, often in intensive care units, tethered to machines and feeding tubes, or innursing homes. There is no statistical proof that doctors enjoy a better quality of life before death than the rest of us. But research indicates they are better planners. An often-cited study, published in 2003, of physicians who had been medical students at Johns Hopkins University found that they were more likely than the general public to have created advance directives, or living wills, which lay out specific plans for care if a patient is unable to make decisions. Of the 765 doctors studied, 64 percent had advance directives, compared with about 47 percent for American adults over 40. Patients and families often pay a high price for difficult and unscripted deaths, psychologically and economically. The Dartmouth Atlas Project, which gathers and analyzes health care data, found that 17 percent of Medicare s $550 billion annual budget is spent on patients last six months of life. We haven t bent the cost curve on end-of-life care, said Dr. David C. Goodman, a senior researcher for the project.

The amount spent in the intensive care unit is climbing. Between 2007 and 2010, Medicare spending on patients in the last two years of life jumped 13 percent, to nearly $70,000 per patient. The evidence is clear, Dr. Goodman said, that things could change if doctors respect patient preferences and provide fair information about their prognosis and treatment choices. Sometimes that can be easier said than done, even for doctors. One day last month, as he sat through the first of several hours of chemotherapy at the Dana- Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Dr. Billings said he had looked at statistical survival curves for his form of lymphoma. There are some dots that are very, very soon, and there are some dots that are a long ways off, and I hope I m one of those distant dots, he said. Dr. Billings knows how important it is to have that information. As a palliative care doctor, he has spent a lifetime helping people plan their final days. Also, he is married to a prominent palliative care doctor, Dr. Susan D. Block. As a doctor you know how to ask for things, he said. But as a patient, Dr. Billings said he had learned how difficult it can be to push for all the information needed. It s hard to ask those questions, he said. It s hard to get answers. There is a reason for that. In his book Death Foretold, Nicholas A. Christakis, a Yale sociologist, writes that few physicians even offer patients a prognosis, and when they do, they do not do a great job. Predictions, he argues, are often overly optimistic, with doctors being accurate just 20 percent of the time. But without some basic understanding of the road ahead, Dr. Anthony L. Back, a University of Washington professor and palliative care specialist, said even sophisticated patients could end up where they least want to be: the I.C.U. They haven t realized the implications of saying: Yeah, I ll have that one more treatment. Yeah, I ll have that chemotherapy, Dr. Back said. In Raleigh, N.C., Dr. Kenneth D. Zeitler has practiced oncology for 30 years. The son of a doctor and the father of two doctors, he learned 18 years ago that

he had a brain tumor, which was removed. When the tumor recurred in 2004, he took the conservative route and decided against an operation the risk of paralysis was too great. Dr. Zeitler, his wife and their two children mapped out a clear medical path, or so they thought. Then in June, he woke up with the left half of his body paralyzed, after a lowrisk biopsy caused a hemorrhage in his brain. As a physician myself, when treating patients, I listened to this inner voice, he said, but now he was mad at himself. Instead of just saying No, I won t do this biopsy, I didn t follow my instincts. Dr. Zeitler realized after his biopsy that saying no can mean more than turning down a procedure. It can mean dealing with something much harder: his family s expectations that he will do whatever it takes to live and remain with them. As transparent as Dr. Zeitler was with his family about his clinical care, he had walled off his deepest fears about losing pleasure in his daily life. He has since regained most physical functions and says he has had another chance to talk to his family. As much as they ll cry about me at every bar mitzvah and every wedding, I don t want to be there if I m just completely miserable psychologically and physically, he said. I ve seen that. I don t need that. Dr. Joan Teno, an internist and a professor of medicine at Brown University, says that often, even families like the Zeitlers, avoid the difficult conversations they need to have together and with doctors about the emotional side of dying. We pay for another day in I.C.U., she said. But we don t pay for people to understand what their goals and values are. We don t pay doctors to help patients think about their goals and values and then develop a plan. But the end-of-life choices Americans make are slowly shifting. Medicare figures show that fewer people are dying in the hospital nearly a 10 percent dip in the last decade and that there has been a modest increase in hospice care. At the same time, palliative care is being embraced on a broad scale, with most large hospitals offering services.

The Affordable Care Act could accelerate those trends. Ezekiel Emanuel, the former White House health policy adviser, has said he believes that new penalties for hospital readmissions under the law could improve end-of-life care, making it more likely we make the patient s passage much more comfortable and out of the hospital. Culturally there is movement too. For example, deathoverdinner.org, a website to help people hold end-of-life discussions, was started in August. The project s founder, Michael Hebb, said more than 1,000 dinner parties had been held, including some at nursing homes. The front door at Dr. McKinley s big house was wide open recently. Friends and caregivers came and went. Her hospice bed sat in the living room. Since she stopped treatment, she was spending her time writing, being with her family, gazing at her plants. Dr. McKinley knew she was going to die, and she knew how she wanted it to go. It s not a decision I would change, Dr. McKinley said. If you asked me 700 times I wouldn t change it, because it is the right one for me. Dr. McKinley died Nov. 9, at home, where she wanted to be. Dan Gorenstein is the senior health care reporter for the public radio program Marketplace.