End of Life Issues
Related: About this forumWhat a doctor wishes patients knew about the end
(BJ Miller, M.D. is a hospice & palliative medicine physician who sees patients and families at the UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center. He is the co- author of "A Beginner's Guide to the End: Practical Advice for Living Life and Facing Death.)
As a hospice and palliative medicine physician, my job is to help reduce suffering. At the end of life, that job becomes especially intense when time is short, when machines and data seem to be taking over, and so many intense emotions surround a body that is trying to die. In the spirit of palliation, here are a few things, as a physician, I wish I could share more often with patients and their caregivers.
You don't need to be dying to receive palliative care
Palliative care is an approach, framed within the context of serious illness, where easing suffering is the goal. So, you just need to be sick and suffering to qualify for palliative care, not necessarily dying any time soon. Don't be afraid to say you want it.
Don't wait for your doctor to bring up hospice
In an effort to get primary physicians to think sooner about recommending hospice, researchers came up with the "surprise question." As in: "Doctor, would you be surprised if your patient died within a year?" If the answer is no, then that doctor should start considering a referral to hospice. But there is nothing stopping you from asking the surprise question yourself. If you live with advancing chronic illness and are thinking about how you want your life to go, you might turn the table and ask: "Hey doc, would you be surprised if I died in the next year?" This is a good and bold way to open an honest dialogue with your doctor and get the sort of support you need.
To the caregivers: Don't be afraid to leave the room
How many times will they have spent hours gathered in the room, not eating or sleeping for days, barely blinking, not wanting to miss that last breath, only to have the person die just when they nod off or use the bathroom?
As any hospice worker can tell you, this is also a well-known phenomenon. It's almost as if the presence of others -- especially deeply loved ones -- gets in the way of the dying person's final step. That big moment may need to happen alone. What dying people seem to need at the very end is to know that the people they love are going to be OK; that life will go on and that you -- the person they care for -- will be able to take care of yourself. So, the kindest thing you can do is to demonstrate that care by leaving the room when you need to. Just be sure to give a kiss and know that it may have to be the last.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/18/opinions/doctor-advice-facing-death-miller/index.html
qazplm135
(7,493 posts)as someone who would really love to live forever, I request that no one leave the room ever...take shifts!
(gotta have humor about this or it's just existential dread)
SWBTATTReg
(24,085 posts)alwaysinasnit
(5,252 posts)Delmette2.0
(4,261 posts)I want to find his book. This hits home for me.
left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)Delmette2.0
(4,261 posts)keithbvadu2
(40,083 posts)Sometimes we fear the slowness and suffering more than the death itself.
Gothmog
(154,421 posts)My ex-father in law is in hospice now. I was the one who had to help explain the process to my ex-mother in law. She was hoping for a recovery but the doctor was telling her that this was a remote option. My son came in during this session and he later took over and helped his grandmother get the paperwork done to move to the Hospice.
My ex-father in law has been in Hospice for almost 2 weeks and is still hanging on. I will be headed up there later this afternoon. We bring food and try to be there for my mother in law. No my ex-mother in law wishes that she started Hospice earlier
The hospice is wonderful and I will be donating to this facility soon.