In
2003, I decided to branch out from geriatrics and try something new. Well, a
little new. I recreated myself as a palliative care physician. I’d previously
been a bit dubious about palliative care, which in its early days focused
principally on people with cancer and almost exclusively on people who were
imminently dying. My interest was in people who were in the last phase of life,
whether that phase would last days, months, or even years. My patients at
Hebrew Rehab Center, where I had worked for the previous eleven years, had an average
age of 88. They all had major limitations in their ability to function
independently, otherwise they wouldn’t have been living at Hebrew Rehab: either
significant physical problems or, a large proportion of cases, cognitive
dysfunction, or both. I had come to realize that many if not all of them stood
to benefit from a palliative approach to medical care. So why not embrace
palliative care as a specialty, focusing principally on very old people, but
also expanding my horizons to include younger individuals?
Palliative
care was a good fit for me. I came to see the field as built on three legs:
advance care planning (some people include communication here), psychosocial
support, and symptom management. It is an interdisciplinary field and its focus
is on supporting patients and their families through a difficult period of
their lives. Much of the work involves making sure people understand their
condition and what they are facing so they can make realistic and wise
decisions about the treatments they receive as well as about where and how they
live. Many of my colleagues shied away from such discussions; I thrived on
them, feeling I could help assure that patients got the kind of care that made
sense for them as they approached the end of their lives. Often, I rescued them
from needlessly burdensome and ultimately futile medical interventions. There
was, however, one strand of palliative care that disturbed me.
What
bothered me was the tendency to exalt dying, to see dying as an opportunity for
growth and transcendence. Now, not all palliative care physicians, hospice
nurses, and other professionals are afflicted by this tendency, but for some it
was kind of a religion. The business of palliative care, in this view, is to
promote spiritual growth. And by implication, patients who don’t find dying
uplifting, who aren’t able to reach new heights or discover new aspects of
themselves, are failures.
I
confess that I’ve never been enthusiastic about the American psychologist,
Abraham Maslow, with his five (later nine) stages, culminating in
“self-actualization,” or the experience of
“self-fulfillment” manifested by “peak growth experiences.” I’m even
less enthusiastic about applying this model to people approaching the end of
life. Dying, and even living the last
six or twelve or twenty-four months of life, is often a messy business. It
seems to me to be good enough to be physically and emotionally reasonably
comfortable. That’s hard enough to achieve. Ideally, it involves attaining a
certain level of inner peace, of acceptance of the life one has led. But growth
experiences? Euphoria? Joy? Wonder? That seems a bit much. So I was pleased to
read the article in the Sunday NY Times about B.J. Miller, a palliative care
physician who is a triple amputee and who until recently served as executive
director of the “quirky” Zen Hospice Project in San Francisco.
Miller
is by all accounts a remarkable doctor and human being. He is charismatic. He
is intense. He has the capacity to truly “be” with people and help them come to
terms with their condition and their lives. His story, well told by journalist
Jon Mooallem, is inspiring. But he isn’t big on transcendence. In his own
words, palliative care in general and Zen Hospice in particular aren’t about
our need for death to be a hypertranscendent experience: “Most people aren’t having these transformative
deathbed moments. And if you hold that out as a goal, they’re just going to
feel like they’re failing.” Instead, the name of the game is to allow those who
are dying and the people who love them to “live a succession of relatively
ordinary, relatively satisfying present moments together.” Now that’s a
philosophy that makes sense.
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