Doctors on silk - is this borne out by your experience?

Udhay

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Doctors' Secret for How to Die Right
Why do physicians make different end-of-life choices than the rest of us?

October 14, 2013  |

Dr. Ken Murray wrote an essay for the web-only magazine Zócalo Public
Square, thinking he’d be lucky to attract a few dozen readers and
generate an online comment or two. Instead, the physician—a UC Davis
medical-school graduate who taught family medicine at the University of
Southern California—drew an avalanche of responses. In fact, what he
wrote put him center stage in a swirling debate about life, death and
doctors.

What did he reveal that was so groundbreaking?

He claimed that a vast majority of physicians make dramatically
different end-of-life choices than the rest of us. Put simply, most
doctors choose comfort and calm instead of aggressive interventions or
treatments, he said. Another way to look at it is that doctors routinely
order procedures for patients near the end of life that they would not
choose for themselves.

What do doctors know that the rest of us don’t?

According to Murray, physicians have seen the limitations of modern
medicine up close and know that attempts to prolong a life can often
lead to a protracted, heartbreaking death.

Murray’s 2011 “How Doctors Die” was translated into multiple languages
and written about in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The
Washington Post and The Sacramento Bee. Thousands of people commented on
it via the scores of newspapers and blogs that reprinted it. Readers
told of “near-dead relatives being assaulted with toxic drugs,” said
Murray, being offered “painful procedures for no good reason.” Among the
responses were hundreds of anecdotes from physicians and health-care
professionals that backed Murray’s thesis.

“Most of the stories were heart-wrenching,” he said.

Data that proves the divide isn’t hard to find. Murray cites the Johns
Hopkins Precursors Study, one of the longest longitudinal inquiries into
aging in the world, which contains a running medical record of health
statistics on a group of about 750 doctors, who were members of the
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore between 1948
and 1964. Through the years, the study has helped medical research
correlate, for example, high blood cholesterol with heart attacks. But
15 years ago—with its participants in their 60s, 70s and 80s—the
researchers began asking about end-of-life choices.

Dr. Joseph Gallo, director of the Precursors Study, was happy to explain
how the data has continually found that doctors—by a vast majority—make
different choices when faced with dire diagnoses. Physicians who choose
the least procedures also tend to have advance directives, an important
bit of paperwork that allows patients to choose a health-care proxy and
determine in advance what interventions they do or don’t want if they
experience a decline in health.

In one scenario where the study group was asked what their wishes would
be if they had an irreversible brain disease that left them unable to
recognize people or speak, “most people would want everything,” said
Gallo, while about 90 percent of doctors “would say no” to CPR, a
mechanical ventilator (breathing machine), and kidney dialysis. About 80
percent of the doctors would also say no to major surgery or a feeding
tube, he said.

“It seems the more familiar you are with interventions, the less you
want,” Gallo said point-blank.

Welcome to “the gap.”

Murray believes blame for the breach can be split three ways between bad
physician-patient communication, unrealistic expectations on the part of
patients, and their families and a health-care system that encourages
excessive treatment. (Note: A quarter of all Medicare spending occurs in
the last year of life.)

‘Don't tube me'

When you consider the large number of deaths Sutter Health’s Dr. James
McGregor has witnessed in his decades as a Sacramento-area specialist in
palliative care and hospice, it is poignant to see him almost overtaken
with emotion while telling the story of Ella.

An elderly woman diagnosed with a terminal illness, Ella (not her real
name) had strong feelings about not having any medical interventions as
she neared her life’s end. She’d filled out her paperwork to this effect
and made it official, with her husband serving as her health-care agent
in the event that she became unable to make her own decisions. Soon came
the inescapable point when Ella, stretched out on a hospital bed and
near the end of life, began having difficulty breathing. One of her many
doctors said to the husband, “She’s struggling so much. Don’t you want
her on a respirator?” Thinking the doctor knew best, the husband gave
his consent, and Ella was hooked up to a breathing machine.

That one moment’s choice turned into seven long days of regret.

Despite her wishes, Ella remained marginally alive in the intensive care
unit with “tubes everywhere” and a machine breathing for her throughout
the week. According to McGregor, the husband then had to take
responsibility to withdraw care. “He was heartbroken,” said McGregor.
“He felt he had betrayed his wife during her last week of life. … You
could see such pain.”

McGregor, an expert in hospice care (which provides terminally ill
patients with comfort rather than aggressive treatments) and palliative
medicine (with its focus on relieving and preventing suffering), said
Ella’s experience was probably more common than most people know.

“I’ve seen patients die in the ICU with every line going, everything,
and the family can’t even get close to them.”

Indeed, though most people want to pass away at home surrounded by loved
ones, 70 percent die in a hospital, nursing home or long-term-care
facilities after a long struggle with advanced cancer, heart failure,
incurable disease or the multiple incapacities of old age.

When asked about the gap and why doctors don’t tend to find themselves
hooked to respirators in ICUs at the end of their lives in the manner of
Ella, McGregor was somber.

“Often the question isn’t framed well,” said McGregor, as in, “’We have
two options here: We can go full-court press, or we can aggressively
manage your symptoms and keep you comfortable. What would be quality of
life for you?’”

Physicians, he said, tend to choose option No. 2, because they’ve seen
what they’ve seen, and “they know one intervention can start a whole
cascade.”

Dr. Kevin Ryan, a retired physician and a self-published author, puts it
a different way: “Doctors have seen [death and dying] from every vantage
point except it personally happening to them.

“When you’re close to the fire, you know what it is to get burned.”

Medicine and hospitals exists to fight disease and death, goes the
thinking, so if a patient dies, the doctor has failed.

McGregor remembered a clinical-skills class he’d taken in medical school
that imparted a first-person list of steps a physician should take that
concluded with the words “if the patient dies, I failed.”

“We’re supposed to do things, we’re supposed to fix things,” said
McGregor. “Physicians can feel powerless if they can’t offer something,
and it’s difficult for them to talk about the options that are not the
aggressive ’making you healthy’ options. … A physician can feel he’s
failed a patient when he says, ’Well, you can go to hospice.’”

Indeed, a report published last year in the New England Journal of
Medicine found that 69 percent of lung-cancer patients and 81 percent of
colorectal-cancer patients did not report understanding from their
doctor that chemotherapy was not at all likely to cure their cancer.

But it runs two ways, said McGregor.

The patient or the family can often come in with vastly unrealistic
expectations, sometimes reinforced by popular culture. Many see CPR, for
example, as a sure-bet lifesaver, but in truth, it is rarely effective.
“There’s a popular misperception that medicine can fix everything,” he
said. “And there’s also a sense of entitlement sometimes—’You should
give me everything.’”

Sadly, another reason physicians sometimes “do everything” with terribly
ill patients is fear of malpractice lawsuits.

“I believe it is a factor,” said McGregor. The other doctors interviewed
agreed. “Sometimes, [physicians] just say, ’OK, we’ll give you
everything,’ even though we know it’s not going to help” as a way of not
becoming entangled in a legal action from a family member who thought
more procedures were merited, he said.

As for his own end-of-life wishes, if faced with a terminal illness, his
wish is to die at home without interventions and with the assistance of
hospice.

“I joke that I have DNR, DNAR and AND tattooed on my chest,” said
McGregor (do not resuscitate, do not attempt resuscitation, allow
natural death).

“Just don’t tube me,” he clarified.

‘No way are they doing that to me'

Dr. Michael GuntherMaher, the medical director for the Sacramento and
Roseville Kaiser tells the story of Sophie.

An 88-year-old African-American woman, Sophie (not her real name)
checked into Kaiser a few months back with a history of rapid weight
loss and an infection called sepsis, said GuntherMaher. “We did some
tests and found she was anemic. We scanned her abdomen … and we found a
mass. It was very clear she had cancer,” he said.

Initially, Sophie said she wanted the doctors to do everything possible
to save her life, said GuntherMaher. At the family’s strong urging, the
hospital proceeded to pull out all the stops with interventions and
drugs. “And this woman just slowly died in the ICU with a tube down her
throat,” he said. “The family finally said, ’Take her off the machine.’
It was a very difficult and protracted ending to her life when there was
no reasonable hope any of it would work.”

GuntherMaher, who had been asked to consult on Sophie’s case in his role
as a palliative specialist, reflected that the woman had given up the
chance to return to Oakland to die peacefully in her own surroundings,
“around friends and family who wanted so much to visit her, to say
goodbye. … That opportunity was completely lost,” he said.

“I have a lot of stories like this,” he said. “The hospital is full of
them.”

GuntherMaher views Sophie’s case as an example of what he refers to as
the chaos that accompanies many end-of-life scenarios.

“A lot of life changes go on in the later years, and families are
ill-prepared,” he said. “There’s illness. People are in and out of
hospitals or nursing homes. They’re in these places, even though they
used to think, ’I never wanted it to be like that.’ But there they are.
And it’s chaotic.”

It was a desire to help make order out of such end-of-life turmoil that
led GuntherMaher on the path to his current post at Kaiser.

“I think most people … what they have is fear,” he said. “They’re
afraid. They’re confronted. There’s unfinished business. They can’t
accept that things will come to an end this way because they’re so not
ready.”

This state of mind, he said, often lays the ground for patients or their
families to go for whatever procedures are offered, however aggressive.

GuntherMaher believes patients should be able to choose for themselves
whether or not to undergo treatments near the end of life. “I’m all for
people choosing,” he said, “as long as it’s informed.”

Asked why doctors die different, as in Murray’s thesis, GuntherMaher
responded, “Doctors are different.”

“As a group, we tend to be on the end of the spectrum where you find
capable, intelligent people. So, if you take [such] people and expose
them to these complexities and these difficulties over and over again,
they’re going to take that and process it.

“The other thing we [doctors] are able to do is reconcile the physiology
issues, the biology failing, with the more difficult slippery human
issues. What is a life? What is death? What’s it all about? We’re
confronted with that on virtually a daily basis. Nobody else in our
society is, except maybe pastors.”

GuntherMaher said the physicians he hangs out with are in the hospital
daily and “most of them who have been vocal about [interventions near
the end of life] have basically said, ’No way are they doing that to me.’”

It was no surprise to find that GuntherMaher’s end-of-life choices echo
that of other doctors in the Johns Hopkins’ study. In fact, he’d
gathered his three 20-something children just a few months ago for a
meeting about his wishes. His son and daughter were with there in person
and “We got my daughter and son-in-law on FaceTime on the iPad,” he
said. GuntherMaher pulled out his advance directive and showed his
children a POLST form. Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment
forms state what kind of medical treatment seriously ill
patients—usually already in the hospital or a nursing facility—want for
themselves.

“I think it provided a good opportunity for us to be a family and talk
about something meaningful together and practice compassionate listening
and thoughtful speaking with one another,” he said, “and consider for a
moment that time is precious.”

Among other things, GuntherMaher told them, “I don’t want to be
resuscitated if my heart stops. I don’t want to be on a mechanical
ventilator. When my time comes, I want to die in my own home.”

‘Medicine can't fix everything'

Dr. Jeffrey Yee stands before his students—gray button-down shirt,
khakis and a pocket pager—with all the friendly charisma of a
social-science professor. But he’s a doctor who takes time from his paid
duties as a general internist to teach elderly and chronically ill
patents about advanced directives and POLST forms. Yee’s audience in
early September consisted of 14 elderly patients—many of whom looked to
be struggling with chronic disease or cancer.

Yee, who testified in 1997 on behalf of POLST before the state
Legislature, led his students through a PowerPoint presentation on
advance directives and the importance of naming a health-care agent or
proxy. He and a nurse practitioner even performed a skit where the two
played siblings with different interpretations of what a doctor
recommended should be done with a mom on life support.

“We try to get people to consider the issues beforehand, to have
conversations,” Yee said before the class. “We try to get people to
experience the tensions and trade-offs they very well may face in the
future.”

Launched six months ago, Yee’s group-education project is one of many
approaches being taken across the country to better inform people about
their options. Modeled after a much-lauded program at Gundersen Lutheran
Medical Center in Lacrosse, Wis., which proactively encourages
hospitalgoers to fill out advance directives, Yee’s patients are invited
to attend the two free classes by their doctor if their medical record
triggers them as age 60 with a chronic illness (diabetes, heart failure,
lung problems) or if they are simply 70 or older.

Yee doesn’t use “end-of-life” terminology or the word “death” in his
seminars. Nor does he discuss specific procedures and their possible
outcomes. “When you reduce it to a conversation about ’this procedure
succeeds this amount of time,’ that doesn’t really give you the big
picture,” he said. “What number should it be that you say, ’This is a
low chance of success’?” he asked. If you’re 95, he said, you might
answer that question differently than if you are 30 and have three kids.

Interestingly, Yee—the youngest doctor interviewed—was the only local
physician who didn’t immediately say he would decline interventions if
he himself was faced with a terminal illness. “It depends on the
situation,” he said. “I don’t know that I could specify that so
specifically now.”

Another program that could result in narrowing the gap between
physicians and everybody else on end-of-life choices is dubbed ROYL,
short for The Rest of Your Life.

Dr. Philip Lisagor, a retired cardiothoracic surgeon and chief medical
officer for ROYL in Reno, Nev., had a realization toward the end of his
career: “It struck me that nobody was talking to patients with serious
illnesses about what was happening,” he said.

“A specialist would come in with some high-tech procedure and send them
back to the referring doctor. Something else would happen to the
patient, and they’d be off for another procedure. Doctors weren’t
talking to each other or to their patients.

“A game is played,” he said.

Lisagor noted that the profit motive should not be overlooked when
discussing why the gap exists, and so many doctors often encourage
interventions they themselves wouldn’t choose. “The health-care industry
makes a huge amount of money on end-of-life care,” said Lisagor. Indeed,
about 27 percent of Medicare’s annual $327 billion budget—$88
billion—now goes to care for patients in their final year of life.

“Everyone in the system profits from more procedures,” said Lisagor,
“including doctors, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, people down the
line in diagnostic centers and etc. … It’s an enormous issue.”

Since retiring, Lisagor and colleagues set up the ROYL program, an
online organizational system that walks people through “all the
documents and information necessary for you to plan your life and health
aging.” ROYL (www.theroyl.com) encompasses financial, emotional and
physical issues in addition to medical and end-of-life planning. He
hopes to beta test at a skilled nursing facility in the Reno area soon
and, eventually, take the program out to the country.

Some believe pilot programs like Yee and Lisagor’s will fasten together
with other sweeping trends—the growth in hospital-based palliative-care
programs, increased use of POLST forms, an uptick in the number of
people dying in hospice care—and create a seismic shift in how America,
and not just its doctors, faces death.

Nudging along that transformation could be the huge numbers of baby
boomers who have begun turning 65 (about 8,000 per day) and, thus,
looking at their final chapter of life. In the social realm, members of
this inimitable generation may set their sights on experiencing better
deaths than the often-troubling ones they have been seeing their parents
undergo. On the economic front, the boomers present a major financial
incentive for addressing the issue, since Medicare costs for this single
generation are projected to skyrocket if end-of-life scenarios remain
status quo.

Though a proposal to reimburse doctors for talking about end-of-life
choices with patients was ultimately left out of the Affordable Care Act
(thanks to Sarah Palin’s 2009 charge that such conversations amounted to
“death panels” for “grandma”) many, like Ken Murray, think that
controversy actually got people finally talking and thinking about
end-of-life matters.

“There’s a cultural change taking place across the country,” said
Murray, the doctor with the oft-reprinted essay. “The taboo is
unraveling. People want to talk about this. … It’ll take time, but I
believe it’s happening.”

The physicians interviewed for this story also tended to agree that
things were improving in the end-of-life care realm.

“I do think it’s getting better,” said McGregor. “I think what people
need to understand is that there is the possibility of having a
comfortable death, of mending relationships and dying surrounded by
loved ones. People need to understand this as a real and viable option.

“And they need to understand that medicine can’t fix everything.”

Will better communication, reasonable expectations and a hoped-for
future health-care system where financial incentives no longer skew
toward senseless interventions help narrow Murray’s gap and increase the
possibility for more “good” deaths?

Naturally, the doctors hope so.

But perhaps Dr. GuntherMaher’s patient Clarice, can best give testament.

In her early 60s, Clarice (not her real name) was diagnosed in February
with kidney cancer. “She was not curable,” he said. After doing some
tests, “We told her, ’This is not looking good. You have advanced
cancer, and you’re too weak to undergo chemotherapy, which means you
don’t have any reasonable options for beating this.’”

Clarice appreciated the candor, said GuntherMaher.

“She has a spiritual belief system. She has a healthy marriage, healthy
relationships with her kids, and she said, ’I’ll be OK with this. I want
to go home and be with my family and let them take care of me. I can
still enjoy some time with them.’”

She left the hospital and went into hospice, said the doctor. “I spoke
to her daughter yesterday, and they’re flying her sister home from Guam.
… The family is coming together. The children are saying, ’I’m dropping
everything to be with Mom.’ There’s a time in life when you just do that.”

In other words, Clarice accepted her fate and prepared for her own good
death. She knew what she wanted. She made her choices. She embraced a
truth about dying that most physicians already know all too well: Often
doing less allows so much more.


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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