{"id":408,"date":"2010-12-06T10:55:31","date_gmt":"2010-12-06T14:55:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/?page_id=408"},"modified":"2010-12-13T19:19:43","modified_gmt":"2010-12-13T23:19:43","slug":"letting-go","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/?page_id=408","title":{"rendered":"Letting Go"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articleheads\">\n<h1 id=\"articlehed\">Letting Go<\/h1>\n<h2 id=\"articleintro\">What should medicine do when it can\u2019t save your life?<\/h2>\n<h4 id=\"articleauthor\">by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/bios\/atul_gawande\/search?contributorName=atul%20gawande\">Atul Gawande<\/a> August 2, 2010<\/h4>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/images\/2010\/08\/02\/p465\/100802_r19854_p465.jpg\" alt=\"Modern medicine is good at staving off death with aggressive interventions\" \/><\/div>\n<p>Modern medicine is  good at staving off death with aggressive interventions\u2014and bad at  knowing when to focus, instead, on improving the days that terminal  patients have left.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>Sara  Thomas Monopoli was pregnant with her first child when her doctors  learned that she was going to die. It started with a cough and a pain in  her back. Then a chest X-ray showed that her left lung had collapsed,  and her chest was filled with fluid. A sample of the fluid was drawn off  with a long needle and sent for testing. Instead of an infection, as  everyone had expected, it was lung cancer, and it had already spread to  the lining of her chest. Her pregnancy was thirty-nine weeks along, and  the obstetrician who had ordered the test broke the news to her as she  sat with her husband and her parents. The obstetrician didn\u2019t get into  the prognosis\u2014she would bring in an oncologist for that\u2014but Sara was  stunned. Her mother, who had lost her best friend to lung cancer, began  crying.<\/p>\n<p>The doctors wanted to start treatment right away, and that  meant inducing labor to get the baby out. For the moment, though, Sara  and her husband, Rich, sat by themselves on a quiet terrace off the  labor floor. It was a warm Monday in June, 2007. She took Rich\u2019s hands,  and they tried to absorb what they had heard. Monopoli was thirty-four.  She had never smoked, or lived with anyone who had. She exercised. She  ate well. The diagnosis was bewildering. \u201cThis is going to be O.K.,\u201d  Rich told her. \u201cWe\u2019re going to work through this. It\u2019s going to be hard,  yes. But we\u2019ll figure it out. We can find the right treatment.\u201d For the  moment, though, they had a baby to think about.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cSo Sara and I  looked at each other,\u201d Rich recalled, \u201cand we said, \u2018We don\u2019t have  cancer on Tuesday. It\u2019s a cancer-free day. We\u2019re having a baby. It\u2019s  exciting. And we\u2019re going to enjoy our baby.\u2019 \u201d On Tuesday, at 8:55 P.M., Vivian Monopoli, seven pounds nine ounces, was born. She had wavy brown hair, like her mom, and she was perfectly healthy.<\/p>\n<p>The  next day, Sara underwent blood tests and body scans. Dr. Paul Marcoux,  an oncologist, met with her and her family to discuss the findings. He  explained that she had a non-small cell lung cancer that had started in  her left lung. Nothing she had done had brought this on. More than  fifteen per cent of lung cancers\u2014more than people realize\u2014occur in  non-smokers. Hers was advanced, having metastasized to multiple lymph  nodes in her chest and its lining. The cancer was inoperable. But there  were chemotherapy options, notably a relatively new drug called Tarceva,  which targets a gene mutation commonly found in lung cancers of female  non-smokers. Eighty-five per cent respond to this drug, and, Marcoux  said, \u201csome of these responses can be long-term.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Words like  \u201crespond\u201d and \u201clong-term\u201d provide a reassuring gloss on a dire reality.  There is no cure for lung cancer at this stage. Even with chemotherapy,  the median survival is about a year. But it seemed harsh and pointless  to confront Sara and Rich with this now. Vivian was in a bassinet by the  bed. They were working hard to be optimistic. As Sara and Rich later  told the social worker who was sent to see them, they did not want to  focus on survival statistics. They wanted to focus on \u201caggressively  managing\u201d this diagnosis.<\/p>\n<p>Sara  was started on the Tarceva, which produced an itchy, acne-like facial  rash and numbing tiredness. She also underwent a surgical procedure to  drain the fluid around her lung; when the fluid kept coming back, a  thoracic surgeon eventually placed a small, permanent tube in her chest,  which she could drain whenever fluid accumulated and interfered with  her breathing. Three weeks after the delivery, she was admitted to the  hospital with severe shortness of breath from a pulmonary embolism\u2014a  blood clot in an artery to the lungs, which is dangerous but not  uncommon in cancer patients. She was started on a blood thinner. Then  test results showed that her tumor cells did not have the mutation that  Tarceva targets. When Marcoux told Sara that the drug wasn\u2019t going to  work, she had an almost violent physical reaction to the news, bolting  to the bathroom in mid-discussion with a sudden bout of diarrhea.<\/p>\n<p>Dr.  Marcoux recommended a different, more standard chemotherapy, with two  drugs called carboplatin and paclitaxel. But the paclitaxel triggered an  extreme, nearly overwhelming allergic response, so he switched her to a  regimen of carboplatin plus gemcitabine. Response rates, he said, were  still very good for patients on this therapy.<\/p>\n<p>She spent the  remainder of the summer at home, with Vivian and her husband and her  parents, who had moved in to help. She loved being a mother. Between  chemotherapy cycles, she began trying to get her life back.<\/p>\n<p>Then,  in October, a CT scan showed that the tumor deposits in her left lung  and chest and lymph nodes had grown substantially. The chemotherapy had  failed. She was switched to a drug called pemetrexed. Studies found that  it could produce markedly longer survival in some patients. In reality,  however, only a small percentage of patients gained very much. On  average, the drug extended survival by only two months\u2014from eleven  months to thirteen months\u2014and that was in patients who, unlike Sara, had  responded to first-line chemotherapy.<\/p>\n<p>She worked hard to take  the setbacks and side effects in stride. She was upbeat by nature, and  she managed to maintain her optimism. Little by little, however, she  grew sicker\u2014increasingly exhausted and short of breath. By November, she  didn\u2019t have the wind to walk the length of the hallway from the parking  garage to Marcoux\u2019s office; Rich had to push her in a wheelchair.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>A  few days before Thanksgiving, she had another CT scan, which showed  that the pemetrexed\u2014her third drug regimen\u2014wasn\u2019t working, either. The  lung cancer had spread: from the left chest to the right; to the liver;  to the lining of her abdomen; and to her spine. Time was running out.<\/p>\n<p>This  is the moment in Sara\u2019s story that poses a fundamental question for  everyone living in the era of modern medicine: What do we want Sara and  her doctors to do now? Or, to put it another way, if you were the one  who had metastatic cancer\u2014or, for that matter, a similarly advanced case  of emphysema or congestive heart failure\u2014what would you want your  doctors to do?<\/p>\n<p>The issue has become pressing, in recent years, for  reasons of expense. The soaring cost of health care is the greatest  threat to the country\u2019s long-term solvency, and the terminally ill  account for a lot of it. Twenty-five per cent of all Medicare spending  is for the five per cent of patients who are in their final year of  life, and most of that money goes for care in their last couple of  months which is of little apparent benefit.<\/p>\n<p>Spending on a disease  like cancer tends to follow a particular pattern. There are high initial  costs as the cancer is treated, and then, if all goes well, these costs  taper off. Medical spending for a breast-cancer survivor, for instance,  averaged an estimated fifty-four thousand dollars in 2003, the vast  majority of it for the initial diagnostic testing, surgery, and, where  necessary, radiation and chemotherapy. For a patient with a fatal  version of the disease, though, the cost curve is U-shaped, rising again  toward the end\u2014to an average of sixty-three thousand dollars during the  last six months of life with an incurable breast cancer. Our medical  system is excellent at trying to stave off death with  eight-thousand-dollar-a-month chemotherapy, three-thousand-dollar-a-day  intensive care, five-thousand-dollar-an-hour surgery. But, ultimately,  death comes, and no one is good at knowing when to stop.<\/p>\n<p>The  subject seems to reach national awareness mainly as a question of who  should \u201cwin\u201d when the expensive decisions are made: the insurers and the  taxpayers footing the bill or the patient battling for his or her life.  Budget hawks urge us to face the fact that we can\u2019t afford everything.  Demagogues shout about rationing and death panels. Market purists blame  the existence of insurance: if patients and families paid the bills  themselves, those expensive therapies would all come down in price. But  they\u2019re debating the wrong question. The failure of our system of  medical care for people facing the end of their life runs much deeper.  To see this, you have to get close enough to grapple with the way  decisions about care are actually made.<\/p>\n<p>Recently, while seeing a  patient in an intensive-care unit at my hospital, I stopped to talk with  the critical-care physician on duty, someone I\u2019d known since college.  \u201cI\u2019m running a warehouse for the dying,\u201d she said bleakly. Out of the  ten patients in her unit, she said, only two were likely to leave the  hospital for any length of time. More typical was an almost  eighty-year-old woman at the end of her life, with irreversible  congestive heart failure, who was in the I.C.U. for the second time in  three weeks, drugged to oblivion and tubed in most natural orifices and a  few artificial ones. Or the seventy-year-old with a cancer that had  metastasized to her lungs and bone, and a fungal pneumonia that arises  only in the final phase of the illness. She had chosen to forgo  treatment, but her oncologist pushed her to change her mind, and she was  put on a ventilator and antibiotics. Another woman, in her eighties,  with end-stage respiratory and kidney failure, had been in the unit for  two weeks. Her husband had died after a long illness, with a feeding  tube and a tracheotomy, and she had mentioned that she didn\u2019t want to  die that way. But her children couldn\u2019t let her go, and asked to proceed  with the placement of various devices: a permanent tracheotomy, a  feeding tube, and a dialysis catheter. So now she just lay there  tethered to her pumps, drifting in and out of consciousness.<\/p>\n<p>Almost  all these patients had known, for some time, that they had a terminal  condition. Yet they\u2014along with their families and doctors\u2014were  unprepared for the final stage. \u201cWe are having more conversation now  about what patients want for the end of their life, by far, than they  have had in all their lives to this point,\u201d my friend said. \u201cThe problem  is that\u2019s way too late.\u201d In 2008, the national Coping with Cancer  project published a study showing that terminally ill cancer patients  who were put on a mechanical ventilator, given electrical defibrillation  or chest compressions, or admitted, near death, to intensive care had a  substantially worse quality of life in their last week than those who  received no such interventions. And, six months after their death, their  caregivers were three times as likely to suffer major depression.  Spending one\u2019s final days in an I.C.U. because of terminal illness is  for most people a kind of failure. You lie on a ventilator, your every  organ shutting down, your mind teetering on delirium and permanently  beyond realizing that you will never leave this borrowed, fluorescent  place. The end comes with no chance for you to have said goodbye or  \u201cIt\u2019s O.K.\u201d or \u201cI\u2019m sorry\u201d or \u201cI love you.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>People have concerns  besides simply prolonging their lives. Surveys of patients with terminal  illness find that their top priorities include, in addition to avoiding  suffering, being with family, having the touch of others, being  mentally aware, and not becoming a burden to others. Our system of  technological medical care has utterly failed to meet these needs, and  the cost of this failure is measured in far more than dollars. The hard  question we face, then, is not how we can afford this system\u2019s expense.  It is how we can build a health-care system that will actually help  dying patients achieve what\u2019s most important to them at the end of their  lives.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>For  all but our most recent history, dying was typically a brief process.  Whether the cause was childhood infection, difficult childbirth, heart  attack, or pneumonia, the interval between recognizing that you had a  life-threatening ailment and death was often just a matter of days or  weeks. Consider how our Presidents died before the modern era. George  Washington developed a throat infection at home on December 13, 1799,  that killed him by the next evening. John Quincy Adams, Millard  Fillmore, and Andrew Johnson all succumbed to strokes, and died within  two days. Rutherford Hayes had a heart attack and died three days later.  Some deadly illnesses took a longer course: James Monroe and Andrew  Jackson died from the months-long consumptive process of what appears to  have been tuberculosis; Ulysses Grant\u2019s oral cancer took a year to kill  him; and James Madison was bedridden for two years before dying of \u201cold  age.\u201d But, as the end-of-life researcher Joanne Lynn has observed,  people usually experienced life-threatening illness the way they  experienced bad weather\u2014as something that struck with little warning\u2014and  you either got through it or you didn\u2019t.<\/p>\n<p>Dying used to be accompanied by a prescribed set of customs. Guides to <em>ars moriendi<\/em>,  the art of dying, were extraordinarily popular; a 1415 medieval Latin  text was reprinted in more than a hundred editions across Europe.  Reaffirming one\u2019s faith, repenting one\u2019s sins, and letting go of one\u2019s  worldly possessions and desires were crucial, and the guides provided  families with prayers and questions for the dying in order to put them  in the right frame of mind during their final hours. Last words came to  hold a particular place of reverence.<\/p>\n<p>These days, swift  catastrophic illness is the exception; for most people, death comes only  after long medical struggle with an incurable condition\u2014advanced  cancer, progressive organ failure (usually the heart, kidney, or liver),  or the multiple debilities of very old age. In all such cases, death is  certain, but the timing isn\u2019t. So everyone struggles with this  uncertainty\u2014with how, and when, to accept that the battle is lost. As  for last words, they hardly seem to exist anymore. Technology sustains  our organs until we are well past the point of awareness and coherence.  Besides, how do you attend to the thoughts and concerns of the dying  when medicine has made it almost impossible to be sure who the dying  even are? Is someone with terminal cancer, dementia, incurable  congestive heart failure dying, exactly?<\/p>\n<p>I once cared for a woman  in her sixties who had severe chest and abdominal pain from a bowel  obstruction that had ruptured her colon, caused her to have a heart  attack, and put her into septic shock and renal failure. I performed an  emergency operation to remove the damaged length of colon and give her a  colostomy. A cardiologist stented her coronary arteries. We put her on  dialysis, a ventilator, and intravenous feeding, and stabilized her.  After a couple of weeks, though, it was clear that she was not going to  get much better. The septic shock had left her with heart and  respiratory failure as well as dry gangrene of her foot, which would  have to be amputated. She had a large, open abdominal wound with leaking  bowel contents, which would require twice-a-day cleaning and dressing  for weeks in order to heal. She would not be able to eat. She would need  a tracheotomy. Her kidneys were gone, and she would have to spend three  days a week on a dialysis machine for the rest of her life.<\/p>\n<p>She  was unmarried and without children. So I sat with her sisters in the  I.C.U. family room to talk about whether we should proceed with the  amputation and the tracheotomy. \u201cIs she dying?\u201d one of the sisters asked  me. I didn\u2019t know how to answer the question. I wasn\u2019t even sure what  the word \u201cdying\u201d meant anymore. In the past few decades, medical science  has rendered obsolete centuries of experience, tradition, and language  about our mortality, and created a new difficulty for mankind: how to  die.<\/p>\n<p>One Friday morning this spring, I went on  patient rounds with Sarah Creed, a nurse with the hospice service that  my hospital system operates. I didn\u2019t know much about hospice. I knew  that it specialized in providing \u201ccomfort care\u201d for the terminally ill,  sometimes in special facilities, though nowadays usually at home. I knew  that, in order for a patient of mine to be eligible, I had to write a  note certifying that he or she had a life expectancy of less than six  months. And I knew few patients who had chosen it, except maybe in their  very last few days, because they had to sign a form indicating that  they understood their disease was incurable and that they were giving up  on medical care to stop it. The picture I had of hospice was of a  morphine drip. It was not of this brown-haired and blue-eyed former  I.C.U. nurse with a stethoscope, knocking on Lee Cox\u2019s door on a quiet  street in Boston\u2019s Mattapan neighborhood.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHi, Lee,\u201d Creed said when she entered the house.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHi,  Sarah,\u201d Cox said. She was seventy-two years old. She\u2019d had several  years of declining health due to congestive heart failure from a heart  attack and pulmonary fibrosis, a progressive and irreversible lung  disease. Doctors tried slowing the disease with steroids, but they  didn\u2019t work. She had cycled in and out of the hospital, each time in  worse shape. Ultimately, she accepted hospice care and moved in with her  niece for support. She was dependent on oxygen, and unable to do the  most ordinary tasks. Just answering the door, with her thirty-foot  length of oxygen tubing trailing after her, had left her winded. She  stood resting for a moment, her lips pursed and her chest heaving.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>Creed  took Cox\u2019s arm gently as we walked to the kitchen to sit down, asking  her how she had been doing. Then she asked a series of questions,  targeting issues that tend to arise in patients with terminal illness.  Did Cox have pain? How was her appetite, thirst, sleeping? Any trouble  with confusion, anxiety, or restlessness? Had her shortness of breath  grown worse? Was there chest pain or heart palpitations? Abdominal  discomfort? Trouble with bowel movements or urination or walking?<\/p>\n<p>She  did have some new troubles. When she walked from the bedroom to the  bathroom, she said, it now took at least five minutes to catch her  breath, and that frightened her. She was also getting chest pain. Creed  pulled a stethoscope and a blood-pressure cuff from her medical bag.  Cox\u2019s blood pressure was acceptable, but her heart rate was high. Creed  listened to her heart, which had a normal rhythm, and to her lungs,  hearing the fine crackles of her pulmonary fibrosis but also a new  wheeze. Her ankles were swollen with fluid, and when Creed asked for her  pillbox she saw that Cox was out of her heart medication. She asked to  see Cox\u2019s oxygen equipment. The liquid-oxygen cylinder at the foot of  the neatly made bed was filled and working properly. The nebulizer  equipment for her inhaler treatments, however, was broken.<\/p>\n<p>Given  the lack of heart medication and inhaler treatments, it was no wonder  that she had worsened. Creed called Cox\u2019s pharmacy to confirm that her  refills had been waiting, and had her arrange for her niece to pick up  the medicine when she came home from work. Creed also called the  nebulizer supplier for same-day emergency service.<\/p>\n<p>She then  chatted with Cox in the kitchen for a few minutes. Her spirits were low.  Creed took her hand. Everything was going to be all right, she said.  She reminded her about the good days she\u2019d had\u2014the previous weekend, for  example, when she\u2019d been able to go out with her portable oxygen  cylinder to shop with her niece and get her hair colored.<\/p>\n<p>I asked  Cox about her previous life. She had made radios in a Boston factory.  She and her husband had two children, and several grandchildren.<\/p>\n<p>When  I asked her why she had chosen hospice care, she looked downcast. \u201cThe  lung doctor and heart doctor said they couldn\u2019t help me anymore,\u201d she  said. Creed glared at me. My questions had made Cox sad again.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt\u2019s  good to have my niece and her husband helping to watch me every day,\u201d  she said. \u201cBut it\u2019s not my home. I feel like I\u2019m in the way.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Creed  gave her a hug before we left, and one last reminder. \u201cWhat do you do  if you have chest pain that doesn\u2019t go away?\u201d she asked.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cTake a nitro,\u201d Cox said, referring to the nitroglycerin pill that she can slip under her tongue.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAnd?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cCall you.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhere\u2019s the number?\u201d<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>She pointed to the twenty-four-hour hospice call number that was taped beside her phone.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Outside,  I confessed that I was confused by what Creed was doing. A lot of it  seemed to be about extending Cox\u2019s life. Wasn\u2019t the goal of hospice to  let nature take its course?<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThat\u2019s not the goal,\u201d Creed said.  The difference between standard medical care and hospice is not the  difference between treating and doing nothing, she explained. The  difference was in your priorities. In ordinary medicine, the goal is to  extend life. We\u2019ll sacrifice the quality of your existence now\u2014by  performing surgery, providing chemotherapy, putting you in intensive  care\u2014for the chance of gaining time later. Hospice deploys nurses,  doctors, and social workers to help people with a fatal illness have the  fullest possible lives right now. That means focussing on objectives  like freedom from pain and discomfort, or maintaining mental awareness  for as long as possible, or getting out with family once in a while.  Hospice and palliative-care specialists aren\u2019t much concerned about  whether that makes people\u2019s lives longer or shorter.<\/p>\n<p>Like many  people, I had believed that hospice care hastens death, because patients  forgo hospital treatments and are allowed high-dose narcotics to combat  pain. But studies suggest otherwise. In one, researchers followed 4,493  Medicare patients with either terminal cancer or congestive heart  failure. They found no difference in survival time between hospice and  non-hospice patients with breast cancer, prostate cancer, and colon  cancer. Curiously, hospice care seemed to extend survival for some  patients; those with pancreatic cancer gained an average of three weeks,  those with lung cancer gained six weeks, and those with congestive  heart failure gained three months. The lesson seems almost Zen: you live  longer only when you stop trying to live longer. When Cox was  transferred to hospice care, her doctors thought that she wouldn\u2019t live  much longer than a few weeks. With the supportive hospice therapy she  received, she had already lived for a year.<\/p>\n<p>Creed enters people\u2019s  lives at a strange moment\u2014when they have understood that they have a  fatal illness but have not necessarily acknowledged that they are dying.  \u201cI\u2019d say only about a quarter have accepted their fate when they come  into hospice,\u201d she said. When she first encounters her patients, many  feel that they have simply been abandoned by their doctors. \u201cNinety-nine  per cent understand they\u2019re dying, but one hundred per cent hope  they\u2019re not,\u201d she says. \u201cThey still want to beat their disease.\u201d The  initial visit is always tricky, but she has found ways to smooth things  over. \u201cA nurse has five seconds to make a patient like you and trust  you. It\u2019s in the whole way you present yourself. I do not come in  saying, \u2018I\u2019m so sorry.\u2019 Instead, it\u2019s: \u2018I\u2019m the hospice nurse, and  here\u2019s what I have to offer you to make your life better. And I know we  don\u2019t have a lot of time to waste.\u2019 \u201d<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>That  was how she started with Dave Galloway, whom we visited after leaving  Lee Cox\u2019s home. He was forty-two years old. He and his wife, Sharon,  were both Boston firefighters. They had a three-year-old daughter. He  had pancreatic cancer, which had spread; his upper abdomen was now solid  with tumor. During the past few months, the pain had become unbearable  at times, and he was admitted to the hospital several times for pain  crises. At his most recent admission, about a week earlier, it was found  that the tumor had perforated his intestine. There wasn\u2019t even a  temporary fix for this problem. The medical team started him on  intravenous nutrition and offered him a choice between going to the  intensive-care unit and going home with hospice. He chose to go home.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI  wish we\u2019d gotten involved sooner,\u201d Creed told me. When she and the  hospice\u2019s supervising doctor, Dr. JoAnne Nowak, evaluated Galloway upon  his arrival at home, he appeared to have only a few days left. His eyes  were hollow. His breathing was labored. Fluid swelled his entire lower  body to the point that his skin blistered and wept. He was almost  delirious with abdominal pain.<\/p>\n<p>They got to work. They set up a  pain pump with a button that let him dispense higher doses of narcotic  than he had been allowed. They arranged for an electric hospital bed, so  that he could sleep with his back raised. They also taught Sharon how  to keep Dave clean, protect his skin from breakdown, and handle the  crises to come. Creed told me that part of her job is to take the  measure of a patient\u2019s family, and Sharon struck her as unusually  capable. She was determined to take care of her husband to the end, and,  perhaps because she was a firefighter, she had the resilience and the  competence to do so. She did not want to hire a private-duty nurse. She  handled everything, from the I.V. lines and the bed linens to  orchestrating family members to lend a hand when she needed help.<\/p>\n<p>Creed  arranged for a specialized \u201ccomfort pack\u201d to be delivered by FedEx and  stored in a mini-refrigerator by Dave\u2019s bed. It contained a dose of  morphine for breakthrough pain or shortness of breath, Ativan for  anxiety attacks, Compazine for nausea, Haldol for delirium, Tylenol for  fever, and atropine for drying up the upper-airway rattle that people  can get in their final hours. If any such problem developed, Sharon was  instructed to call the twenty-four-hour hospice nurse on duty, who would  provide instructions about which rescue medications to use and, if  necessary, come out to help.<\/p>\n<p>Dave and Sharon were finally able to  sleep through the night at home. Creed or another nurse came to see him  every day, sometimes twice a day; three times that week, Sharon used the  emergency hospice line to help her deal with Dave\u2019s pain crises or  hallucinations. After a few days, they were even able to go out to a  favorite restaurant; he wasn\u2019t hungry, but they enjoyed just being  there, and the memories it stirred.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>The  hardest part so far, Sharon said, was deciding to forgo the two-litre  intravenous feedings that Dave had been receiving each day. Although  they were his only source of calories, the hospice staff encouraged  discontinuing them because his body did not seem to be absorbing the  nutrition. The infusion of sugars, proteins, and fats made the painful  swelling of his skin and his shortness of breath worse\u2014and for what? The  mantra was live for now. Sharon had balked, for fear that she\u2019d be  starving him. The night before our visit, however, she and Dave decided  to try going without the infusion. By morning, the swelling was markedly  reduced. He could move more, and with less discomfort. He also began to  eat a few morsels of food, just for the taste of it, and that made  Sharon feel better about the decision.<\/p>\n<p>When we arrived, Dave was  making his way back to bed after a shower, his arm around his wife\u2019s  shoulders and his slippered feet taking one shuffling step at a time.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThere\u2019s nothing he likes better than a long hot shower,\u201d Sharon said. \u201cHe\u2019d live in the shower if he could.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Dave  sat on the edge of his bed in fresh pajamas, catching his breath, and  then Creed spoke to him as his daughter, Ashlee, ran in and out of the  room in her beaded pigtails, depositing stuffed animals in her dad\u2019s  lap.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHow\u2019s your pain on a scale of one to ten?\u201d Creed asked.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cA six,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDid you hit the pump?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He didn\u2019t answer for a moment. \u201cI\u2019m reluctant,\u201d he admitted.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhy?\u201d Creed asked.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt feels like defeat,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDefeat?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI don\u2019t want to become a drug addict,\u201d he explained. \u201cI don\u2019t want to need this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Creed  got down on her knees in front of him. \u201cDave, I don\u2019t know anyone who  can manage this kind of pain without the medication,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s  not defeat. You\u2019ve got a beautiful wife and daughter, and you\u2019re not  going to be able to enjoy them with the pain.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou\u2019re right about that,\u201d he said, looking at <a name=\"correctionasterisk\"><\/a> <a name=\"corrected\"><\/a> as she gave him a little horse. And he pressed the button.<\/p>\n<p>Dave  Galloway died one week later\u2014at home, at peace, and surrounded by  family. A week after that, Lee Cox died, too. But, as if to show just  how resistant to formula human lives are, Cox had never reconciled  herself to the incurability of her illnesses. So when her family found  her in cardiac arrest one morning they followed her wishes and called  911 instead of the hospice service. The emergency medical technicians  and firefighters and police rushed in. They pulled off her clothes and  pumped her chest, put a tube in her airway and forced oxygen into her  lungs, and tried to see if they could shock her heart back. But such  efforts rarely succeed with terminal patients, and they did not succeed  with her.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>Hospice  has tried to offer a new ideal for how we die. Although not everyone  has embraced its rituals, those who have are helping to negotiate an <em>ars moriendi<\/em> for our age. But doing so represents a struggle\u2014not only against  suffering but also against the seemingly unstoppable momentum of medical  treatment.<\/p>\n<p>Just before Thanksgiving of 2007,  Sara Monopoli, her husband, Rich, and her mother, Dawn Thomas, met with  Dr. Marcoux to discuss the options she had left. By this point, Sara had  undergone three rounds of chemotherapy with limited, if any, effect.  Perhaps Marcoux could have discussed what she most wanted as death  neared and how best to achieve those wishes. But the signal he got from  Sara and her family was that they wished to talk only about the next  treatment options. They did not want to talk about dying.<\/p>\n<p>Recently,  I spoke to Sara\u2019s husband and her parents. Sara knew that her disease  was incurable, they pointed out. The week after she was given the  diagnosis and delivered her baby, she spelled out her wishes for  Vivian\u2019s upbringing after she was gone. She had told her family on  several occasions that she did not want to die in the hospital. She  wanted to spend her final moments peacefully at home. But the prospect  that those moments might be coming soon, that there might be no way to  slow the disease, \u201cwas not something she or I wanted to discuss,\u201d her  mother said.<\/p>\n<p>Her father, Gary, and her twin sister, Emily, still  held out hope for a cure. The doctors simply weren\u2019t looking hard  enough, they felt. \u201cI just couldn\u2019t believe there wasn\u2019t something,\u201d  Gary said. For Rich, the experience of Sara\u2019s illness had been  disorienting: \u201cWe had a baby. We were young. And this was so shocking  and so odd. We never discussed stopping treatment.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Marcoux took  the measure of the room. With almost two decades of experience treating  lung cancer, he had been through many of these conversations. He has a  calm, reassuring air and a native Minnesotan\u2019s tendency to avoid  confrontation or overintimacy. He tries to be scientific about  decisions.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI know that the vast majority of my patients are  going to die of their disease,\u201d he told me. The data show that, after  failure of second-line chemotherapy, lung-cancer patients rarely get any  added survival time from further treatments and often suffer  significant side effects. But he, too, has his hopes.<\/p>\n<p>He told them  that, at some point, \u201csupportive care\u201d was an option for them to think  about. But, he went on, there were also experimental therapies. He told  them about several that were under trial. The most promising was a  Pfizer drug that targeted one of the mutations found in her cancer\u2019s  cells. Sara and her family instantly pinned their hopes on it. The drug  was so new that it didn\u2019t even have a name, just a number\u2014PF0231006\u2014and  this made it all the more enticing.<\/p>\n<p>There  were a few hovering issues, including the fact that the scientists  didn\u2019t yet know the safe dose. The drug was only in a Phase I trial\u2014that  is, a trial designed to determine the toxicity of a range of doses, not  whether the drug worked. Furthermore, a test of the drug against her  cancer cells in a petri dish showed no effect. But Marcoux didn\u2019t think  that these were decisive obstacles\u2014just negatives. The critical problem  was that the rules of the trial excluded Sara because of the pulmonary  embolism she had developed that summer. To enroll, she would need to  wait two months, in order to get far enough past the episode. In the  meantime, he suggested trying another conventional chemotherapy, called  Navelbine. Sara began the treatment the Monday after Thanksgiving.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s worth pausing to consider what had just happened. Step by step, Sara ended up on a <em>fourth<\/em> round of chemotherapy, one with a minuscule likelihood of altering the  course of her disease and a great likelihood of causing debilitating  side effects. An opportunity to prepare for the inevitable was forgone.  And it all happened because of an assuredly normal circumstance: a  patient and family unready to confront the reality of her disease.<\/p>\n<p>I  asked Marcoux what he hopes to accomplish for terminal lung-cancer  patients when they first come to see him. \u201cI\u2019m thinking, Can I get them a  pretty good year or two out of this?\u201d he said. \u201cThose are <em>my<\/em> expectations. For me, the long tail for a patient like her is three to  four years.\u201d But this is not what people want to hear. \u201cThey\u2019re thinking  ten to twenty years. You hear that time and time again. And I\u2019d be the  same way if I were in their shoes.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>You\u2019d think doctors would be  well equipped to navigate the shoals here, but at least two things get  in the way. First, our own views may be unrealistic. A study led by the  Harvard researcher Nicholas Christakis asked the doctors of almost five  hundred terminally ill patients to estimate how long they thought their  patient would survive, and then followed the patients. Sixty-three per  cent of doctors overestimated survival time. Just seventeen per cent  underestimated it. The average estimate was five hundred and thirty per  cent too high. And, the better the doctors knew their patients, the more  likely they were to err.<\/p>\n<p>Second, we often avoid voicing even  these sentiments. Studies find that although doctors usually tell  patients when a cancer is not curable, most are reluctant to give a  specific prognosis, even when pressed. More than forty per cent of  oncologists report offering treatments that they believe are unlikely to  work. In an era in which the relationship between patient and doctor is  increasingly miscast in retail terms\u2014\u201cthe customer is always  right\u201d\u2014doctors are especially hesitant to trample on a patient\u2019s  expectations. You worry far more about being overly pessimistic than you  do about being overly optimistic. And talking about dying is enormously  fraught. When you have a patient like Sara Monopoli, the last thing you  want to do is grapple with the truth. I know, because Marcoux wasn\u2019t  the only one avoiding that conversation with her. I was, too.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>Earlier that summer, a PET  scan had revealed that, in addition to her lung cancer, she also had  thyroid cancer, which had spread to the lymph nodes of her neck, and I  was called in to decide whether to operate. This second, unrelated  cancer was in fact operable. But thyroid cancers take years to become  lethal. Her lung cancer would almost certainly end her life long before  her thyroid cancer caused any trouble. Given the extent of the surgery  that would have been required, and the potential complications, the best  course was to do nothing. But explaining my reasoning to Sara meant  confronting the mortality of her lung cancer, something that I felt ill  prepared to do.<\/p>\n<p>Sitting in my clinic, Sara did not seem  discouraged by the discovery of this second cancer. She seemed  determined. She\u2019d read about the good outcomes from thyroid-cancer  treatment. So she was geared up, eager to discuss when to operate. And I  found myself swept along by her optimism. Suppose I was wrong, I  wondered, and she proved to be that miracle patient who survived  metastatic lung cancer?<\/p>\n<p>My solution was to avoid the subject  altogether. I told Sara that the thyroid cancer was slow-growing and  treatable. The priority was her lung cancer, I said. Let\u2019s not hold up  the treatment for that. We could monitor the thyroid cancer and plan  surgery in a few months.<\/p>\n<p>I saw her every six weeks, and noted her  physical decline from one visit to the next. Yet, even in a wheelchair,  Sara would always arrive smiling, makeup on and bangs bobby-pinned out  of her eyes. She\u2019d find small things to laugh about, like the tubes that  created strange protuberances under her dress. She was ready to try  anything, and I found myself focussing on the news about experimental  therapies for her lung cancer. After one of her chemotherapies seemed to  shrink the thyroid cancer slightly, I even raised with her the  possibility that an experimental therapy could work against both her  cancers, which was sheer fantasy. Discussing a fantasy was easier\u2014less  emotional, less explosive, less prone to misunderstanding\u2014than  discussing what was happening before my eyes.<\/p>\n<p>Between the lung  cancer and the chemo, Sara became steadily sicker. She slept most of the  time and could do little out of the house. Clinic notes from December  describe shortness of breath, dry heaves, coughing up blood, severe  fatigue. In addition to the drainage tubes in her chest, she required  needle-drainage procedures in her abdomen every week or two to relieve  the severe pressure from the litres of fluid that the cancer was  producing there.<\/p>\n<p>A CT scan in December showed that the lung  cancer was spreading through her spine, liver, and lungs. When we met in  January, she could move only slowly and uncomfortably. Her lower body  had become swollen. She couldn\u2019t speak more than a sentence without  pausing for breath. By the first week of February, she needed oxygen at  home to breathe. Enough time had elapsed since her pulmonary embolism,  however, that she could start on Pfizer\u2019s experimental drug. She just  needed one more set of scans for clearance. These revealed that the  cancer had spread to her brain, with at least nine metastatic growths  across both hemispheres. The experimental drug was not designed to cross  the blood-brain barrier. PF0231006 was not going to work.<\/p>\n<p>And  still Sara, her family, and her medical team remained in battle mode.  Within twenty-four hours, Sara was scheduled to see a radiation  oncologist for whole-brain radiation to try to reduce the metastases. On  February 12th, she completed five days of radiation treatment, which  left her immeasurably fatigued, barely able get out of bed. She ate  almost nothing. She weighed twenty-five pounds less than she had in the  fall. She confessed to Rich that, for the past two months, she had  experienced double vision and was unable to feel her hands.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhy didn\u2019t you tell anyone?\u201d he asked her.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI just didn\u2019t want to stop treatment,\u201d she said. \u201cThey would make me stop.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>She  was given two weeks to recover her strength after the radiation. Then  she would be put on another experimental drug from a small biotech  company. She was scheduled to start on February 25th. Her chances were  rapidly dwindling. But who was to say they were zero?<\/p>\n<p>In 1985, the  paleontologist and writer Stephen Jay Gould published an extraordinary  essay entitled \u201cThe Median Isn\u2019t the Message,\u201d after he had been given a  diagnosis, three years earlier, of abdominal mesothelioma, a rare and  lethal cancer usually associated with asbestos exposure. He went to a  medical library when he got the diagnosis and pulled out the latest  scientific articles on the disease. \u201cThe literature couldn\u2019t have been  more brutally clear: mesothelioma is incurable, with a median survival  of only eight months after discovery,\u201d he wrote. The news was  devastating. But then he began looking at the graphs of the  patient-survival curves.<\/p>\n<p>Gould was a naturalist, and more inclined  to notice the variation around the curve\u2019s middle point than the middle  point itself. What the naturalist saw was remarkable variation. The  patients were not clustered around the median survival but, instead,  fanned out in both directions. Moreover, the curve was skewed to the  right, with a long tail, however slender, of patients who lived many  years longer than the eight-month median. This is where he found solace.  He could imagine himself surviving far out in that long tail. And he  did. Following surgery and experimental chemotherapy, he lived twenty  more years before dying, in 2002, at the age of sixty, from a lung  cancer that was unrelated to his original disease.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt has  become, in my view, a bit too trendy to regard the acceptance of death  as something tantamount to intrinsic dignity,\u201d he wrote in his 1985  essay. \u201cOf course I agree with the preacher of Ecclesiastes that there  is a time to love and a time to die\u2014and when my skein runs out I hope to  face the end calmly and in my own way. For most situations, however, I  prefer the more martial view that death is the ultimate enemy\u2014and I find  nothing reproachable in those who rage mightily against the dying of  the light.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>I  think of Gould and his essay every time I have a patient with a  terminal illness. There is almost always a long tail of possibility,  however thin. What\u2019s wrong with looking for it? Nothing, it seems to me,  unless it means we have failed to prepare for the outcome that\u2019s vastly  more probable. The trouble is that we\u2019ve built our medical system and  culture around the long tail. We\u2019ve created a multitrillion-dollar  edifice for dispensing the medical equivalent of lottery tickets\u2014and  have only the rudiments of a system to prepare patients for the  near-certainty that those tickets will not win. Hope is not a plan, but  hope is our plan.<\/p>\n<p>For Sara, there would be no  miraculous recovery, and, when the end approached, neither she nor her  family was prepared. \u201cI always wanted to respect her request to die  peacefully at home,\u201d Rich later told me. \u201cBut I didn\u2019t believe we could  make it happen. I didn\u2019t know how.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>On the morning of Friday,  February 22nd, three days before she was to start her new round of  chemo, Rich awoke to find his wife sitting upright beside him, pitched  forward on her arms, eyes wide, struggling for air. She was gray,  breathing fast, her body heaving with each open-mouthed gasp. She looked  as if she were drowning. He tried turning up the oxygen in her nasal  tubing, but she got no better.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI can\u2019t do this,\u201d she said, pausing between each word. \u201cI\u2019m scared.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He  had no emergency kit in the refrigerator. No hospice nurse to call. And  how was he to know whether this new development was fixable?<\/p>\n<p>We\u2019ll  go to the hospital, he told her. When he asked if they should drive,  she shook her head, so he called 911, and told her mother, Dawn, who was  in the next room, what was going on. A few minutes later, firemen  swarmed up the stairs to her bedroom, sirens wailing outside. As they  lifted Sara into the ambulance on a stretcher, Dawn came out in tears.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe\u2019re  going to get ahold of this,\u201d Rich told her. This was just another trip  to the hospital, he said to himself. The doctors would figure this out.<\/p>\n<p>At  the hospital, Sara was diagnosed with pneumonia. That troubled the  family, because they thought they\u2019d done everything to keep infection at  bay. They\u2019d washed hands scrupulously, limited visits by people with  young children, even limited Sara\u2019s time with baby Vivian if she showed  the slightest sign of a runny nose. But Sara\u2019s immune system and her  ability to clear her lung secretions had been steadily weakened by the  rounds of radiation and chemotherapy as well as by the cancer.<\/p>\n<p>In  another way, the diagnosis of pneumonia was reassuring, because it was  just an infection. It could be treated. The medical team started Sara on  intravenous antibiotics and high-flow oxygen through a mask. The family  gathered at her bedside, hoping for the antibiotics to work. This could  be reversible, they told one another. But that night and the next  morning her breathing only grew more labored.\u201cI can\u2019t think of a single funny thing to say,\u201d Emily told Sara as their parents looked on.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cNeither  can I,\u201d Sara murmured. Only later did the family realize that those  were the last words they would ever hear from her. After that, she began  to drift in and out of consciousness. The medical team had only one  option left: to put her on a ventilator. Sara was a fighter, right? And  the next step for fighters was to escalate to intensive care.<\/p>\n<p>This  is a modern tragedy, replayed millions of times over. When there is no  way of knowing exactly how long our skeins will run\u2014and when we imagine  ourselves to have much more time than we do\u2014our every impulse is to  fight, to die with chemo in our veins or a tube in our throats or fresh  sutures in our flesh. The fact that we may be shortening or worsening  the time we have left hardly seems to register. We imagine that we can  wait until the doctors tell us that there is nothing more they can do.  But rarely is there <em>nothing<\/em> more that doctors can do. They can  give toxic drugs of unknown efficacy, operate to try to remove part of  the tumor, put in a feeding tube if a person can\u2019t eat: there\u2019s always  something. We want these choices. We don\u2019t want anyone\u2014certainly not  bureaucrats or the marketplace\u2014to limit them. But that doesn\u2019t mean we  are eager to make the choices ourselves. Instead, most often, we make no  choice at all. We fall back on the default, and the default is: Do  Something. Is there any way out of this?<\/p>\n<p>In late 2004, executives  at Aetna, the insurance company, started an experiment. They knew that  only a small percentage of the terminally ill ever halted efforts at  curative treatment and enrolled in hospice, and that, when they did, it  was usually not until the very end. So Aetna decided to let a group of  policyholders with a life expectancy of less than a year receive hospice  services <em>without<\/em> forgoing other treatments. A patient like Sara  Monopoli could continue to try chemotherapy and radiation, and go to the  hospital when she wished\u2014but also have a hospice team at home focussing  on what she needed for the best possible life now and for that morning  when she might wake up unable to breathe. A two-year study of this  \u201cconcurrent care\u201d program found that enrolled patients were much more  likely to use hospice: the figure leaped from twenty-six per cent to  seventy per cent. That was no surprise, since they weren\u2019t forced to  give up anything. The surprising result was that they did give up  things. They visited the emergency room almost half as often as the  control patients did. Their use of hospitals and I.C.U.s dropped by more  than two-thirds. Over-all costs fell by almost a quarter.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>This  was stunning, and puzzling: it wasn\u2019t obvious what made the approach  work. Aetna ran a more modest concurrent-care program for a broader  group of terminally ill patients. For these patients, the traditional  hospice rules applied\u2014in order to qualify for home hospice, they had to  give up attempts at curative treatment. But, either way, they received  phone calls from palliative-care nurses who offered to check in  regularly and help them find services for anything from pain control to  making out a living will. For these patients, too, hospice enrollment  jumped to seventy per cent, and their use of hospital services dropped  sharply. Among elderly patients, use of intensive-care units fell by  more than eighty-five per cent. Satisfaction scores went way up. What  was going on here? The program\u2019s leaders had the impression that they  had simply given patients someone experienced and knowledgeable to talk  to about their daily needs. And somehow that was enough\u2014just talking.<\/p>\n<p>The  explanation strains credibility, but evidence for it has grown in  recent years. Two-thirds of the terminal-cancer patients in the Coping  with Cancer study reported having had no discussion with their doctors  about their goals for end-of-life care, despite being, on average, just  four months from death. But the third who did were far less likely to  undergo cardiopulmonary resuscitation or be put on a ventilator or end  up in an intensive-care unit. Two-thirds enrolled in hospice. These  patients suffered less, were physically more capable, and were better  able, for a longer period, to interact with others. Moreover, six months  after the patients died their family members were much less likely to  experience persistent major depression. In other words, people who had  substantive discussions with their doctor about their end-of-life  preferences were far more likely to die at peace and in control of their  situation, and to spare their family anguish.<\/p>\n<p>Can mere  discussions really do so much? Consider the case of La Crosse,  Wisconsin. Its elderly residents have unusually low end-of-life hospital  costs. During their last six months, according to Medicare data, they  spend half as many days in the hospital as the national average, and  there\u2019s no sign that doctors or patients are halting care prematurely.  Despite average rates of obesity and smoking, their life expectancy  outpaces the national mean by a year.<\/p>\n<p>I spoke to Dr. Gregory  Thompson, a critical-care specialist at Gundersen Lutheran Hospital,  while he was on I.C.U. duty one recent evening, and he ran through his  list of patients with me. In most respects, the patients were like those  found in any I.C.U.\u2014terribly sick and living through the most perilous  days of their lives. There was a young woman with multiple organ failure  from a devastating case of pneumonia, a man in his mid-sixties with a  ruptured colon that had caused a rampaging infection and a heart attack.  Yet these patients were completely different from those in other  I.C.U.s I\u2019d seen: none had a terminal disease; none battled the final  stages of metastatic cancer or untreatable heart failure or dementia.<\/p>\n<p>To  understand La Crosse, Thompson said, you had to go back to 1991, when  local medical leaders headed a systematic campaign to get physicians and  patients to discuss end-of-life wishes. Within a few years, it became  routine for all patients admitted to a hospital, nursing home, or  assisted-living facility to complete a multiple-choice form that boiled  down to four crucial questions. At this moment in your life, the form  asked:<br \/>\n1. Do you want to be resuscitated if your heart stops?<br \/>\n2. Do you want aggressive treatments such as intubation and mechanical ventilation?<br \/>\n3. Do you want antibiotics?<br \/>\n4. Do you want tube or intravenous feeding if you can\u2019t eat on your own?<\/p>\n<p>By  1996, eighty-five per cent of La Crosse residents who died had written  advanced directives, up from fifteen per cent, and doctors almost always  knew of and followed the instructions. Having this system in place,  Thompson said, has made his job vastly easier. But it\u2019s not because the  specifics are spelled out for him every time a sick patient arrives in  his unit.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThese things are not laid out in stone,\u201d he told me.  Whatever the yes\/no answers people may put on a piece of paper, one will  find nuances and complexities in what they mean. \u201cBut, instead of  having the discussion when they get to the I.C.U., we find many times it  has already taken place.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Answers to the list of questions  change as patients go from entering the hospital for the delivery of a  child to entering for complications of Alzheimer\u2019s disease. But, in La  Crosse, the system means that people are far more likely to have talked  about what they want and what they don\u2019t want before they and their  relatives find themselves in the throes of crisis and fear. When wishes  aren\u2019t clear, Thompson said, \u201cfamilies have also become much more  receptive to having the discussion.\u201d The discussion, not the list, was  what mattered most. Discussion had brought La Crosse\u2019s end-of-life costs  down to just over half the national average. It was that simple\u2014and  that complicated.<\/p>\n<p>One Saturday morning last  winter, I met with a woman I had operated on the night before. She had  been undergoing a procedure for the removal of an ovarian cyst when the  gynecologist who was operating on her discovered that she had metastatic  colon cancer. I was summoned, as a general surgeon, to see what could  be done. I removed a section of her colon that had a large cancerous  mass, but the cancer had already spread widely. I had not been able to  get it all. Now I introduced myself. She said a resident had told her  that a tumor was found and part of her colon had been excised.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>Yes,  I said. I\u2019d been able to take out \u201cthe main area of involvement.\u201d I  explained how much bowel was removed, what the recovery would be  like\u2014everything except how much cancer there was. But then I remembered  how timid I\u2019d been with Sara Monopoli, and all those studies about how  much doctors beat around the bush. So when she asked me to tell her more  about the cancer, I explained that it had spread not only to her  ovaries but also to her lymph nodes. I said that it had not been  possible to remove all the disease. But I found myself almost  immediately minimizing what I\u2019d said. \u201cWe\u2019ll bring in an oncologist,\u201d I  hastened to add. \u201cChemotherapy can be very effective in these  situations.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>She absorbed the news in silence, looking down at the  blankets drawn over her mutinous body. Then she looked up at me. \u201cAm I  going to die?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I flinched. \u201cNo, no,\u201d I said. \u201cOf course not.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A  few days later, I tried again. \u201cWe don\u2019t have a cure,\u201d I explained.  \u201cBut treatment can hold the disease down for a long time.\u201d The goal, I  said, was to \u201cprolong your life\u201d as much as possible.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve seen  her regularly in the months since, as she embarked on chemotherapy. She  has done well. So far, the cancer is in check. Once, I asked her and her  husband about our initial conversations. They don\u2019t remember them very  fondly. \u201cThat one phrase that you used\u2014\u2018prolong your life\u2019\u2014it just . .  .\u201d She didn\u2019t want to sound critical.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt was kind of blunt,\u201d her husband said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt sounded harsh,\u201d she echoed. She felt as if I\u2019d dropped her off a cliff.<\/p>\n<p>I  spoke to Dr. Susan Block, a palliative-care specialist at my hospital  who has had thousands of these difficult conversations and is a  nationally recognized pioneer in training doctors and others in managing  end-of-life issues with patients and their families. \u201cYou have to  understand,\u201d Block told me. \u201cA family meeting is a procedure, and it  requires no less skill than performing an operation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One basic  mistake is conceptual. For doctors, the primary purpose of a discussion  about terminal illness is to determine what people want\u2014whether they  want chemo or not, whether they want to be resuscitated or not, whether  they want hospice or not. They focus on laying out the facts and the  options. But that\u2019s a mistake, Block said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cA large part of the  task is helping people negotiate the overwhelming anxiety\u2014anxiety about  death, anxiety about suffering, anxiety about loved ones, anxiety about  finances,\u201d she explained. \u201cThere are many worries and real terrors.\u201d No  one conversation can address them all. Arriving at an acceptance of  one\u2019s mortality and a clear understanding of the limits and the  possibilities of medicine is a process, not an epiphany.<\/p>\n<p>There is  no single way to take people with terminal illness through the process,  but, according to Block, there are some rules. You sit down. You make  time. You\u2019re not determining whether they want treatment X versus Y.  You\u2019re trying to learn what\u2019s most important to them under the  circumstances\u2014so that you can provide information and advice on the  approach that gives them the best chance of achieving it. This requires  as much listening as talking. If you are talking more than half of the  time, Block says, you\u2019re talking too much.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div><span style=\"line-height: 24px; font-size: 16px;\">The  words you use matter. According to experts, you shouldn\u2019t say, \u201cI\u2019m  sorry things turned out this way,\u201d for example. It can sound like pity.  You should say, \u201cI wish things were different.\u201d You don\u2019t ask, \u201cWhat do  you want when you are dying?\u201d You ask, \u201cIf time becomes short, what is  most important to you?\u201d<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Block has a list of items that she aims to  cover with terminal patients in the time before decisions have to be  made: what they understand their prognosis to be; what their concerns  are about what lies ahead; whom they want to make decisions when they  can\u2019t; how they want to spend their time as options become limited; what  kinds of trade-offs they are willing to make.<\/p>\n<p>Ten years ago, her  seventy-four-year-old father, Jack Block, a professor emeritus of  psychology at the University of California at Berkeley, was admitted to a  San Francisco hospital with symptoms from what proved to be a mass  growing in the spinal cord of his neck. She flew out to see him. The  neurosurgeon said that the procedure to remove the mass carried a  twenty-per-cent chance of leaving him quadriplegic, paralyzed from the  neck down. But without it he had a hundred-per-cent chance of becoming  quadriplegic.<\/p>\n<p>The evening before surgery, father and daughter  chatted about friends and family, trying to keep their minds off what  was to come, and then she left for the night. Halfway across the Bay  Bridge, she recalled, \u201cI realized, \u2018Oh, my God, I don\u2019t know what he  really wants.\u2019 \u201d He\u2019d made her his health-care proxy, but they had  talked about such situations only superficially. So she turned the car  around.<\/p>\n<p>Going back in \u201cwas really uncomfortable,\u201d she said. It  made no difference that she was an expert in end-of-life discussions. \u201cI  just felt awful having the conversation with my dad.\u201d But she went  through her list. She told him, \u201c \u2018I need to understand how much you\u2019re  willing to go through to have a shot at being alive and what level of  being alive is tolerable to you.\u2019 We had this quite agonizing  conversation where he said\u2014and this totally shocked me\u2014\u2018Well, if I\u2019m  able to eat chocolate ice cream and watch football on TV, then I\u2019m  willing to stay alive. I\u2019m willing to go through a lot of pain if I have  a shot at that.\u2019<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>\u201cI  would never have expected him to say that,\u201d Block went on. \u201cI mean,  he\u2019s a professor emeritus. He\u2019s never watched a football game in my  conscious memory. The whole picture\u2014it wasn\u2019t the guy I thought I knew.\u201d  But the conversation proved critical, because after surgery he  developed bleeding in the spinal cord. The surgeons told her that, in  order to save his life, they would need to go back in. But he had  already become nearly quadriplegic and would remain severely disabled  for many months and possibly forever. What did she want to do?<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI  had three minutes to make this decision, and, I realized, he had already  made the decision.\u201d She asked the surgeons whether, if her father  survived, he would still be able to eat chocolate ice cream and watch  football on TV. Yes, they said. She gave the O.K. to take him back to  the operating room.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIf I had not had that conversation with him,\u201d  she told me, \u201cmy instinct would have been to let him go at that moment,  because it just seemed so awful. And I would have beaten myself up. Did  I let him go too soon?\u201d Or she might have gone ahead and sent him to  surgery, only to find\u2014as occurred\u2014that he survived only to go through  what proved to be a year of \u201cvery horrible rehab\u201d and disability. \u201cI  would have felt so guilty that I condemned him to that,\u201d she said. \u201cBut  there was no decision for me to make.\u201d He had decided.<\/p>\n<p>During the  next two years, he regained the ability to walk short distances. He  required caregivers to bathe and dress him. He had difficulty swallowing  and eating. But his mind was intact and he had partial use of his  hands\u2014enough to write two books and more than a dozen scientific  articles. He lived for ten years after the operation. This past year,  however, his difficulties with swallowing advanced to the point where he  could not eat without aspirating food particles, and he cycled between  hospital and rehabilitation facilities with the pneumonias that  resulted. He didn\u2019t want a feeding tube. And it became evident that the  battle for the dwindling chance of a miraculous recovery was going to  leave him unable ever to go home again. So, this past January, he  decided to stop the battle and go home.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe started him on hospice  care,\u201d Block said. \u201cWe treated his choking and kept him comfortable.  Eventually, he stopped eating and drinking. He died about five days  later.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Susan Block and her father had the  conversation that we all need to have when the chemotherapy stops  working, when we start needing oxygen at home, when we face high-risk  surgery, when the liver failure keeps progressing, when we become unable  to dress ourselves. I\u2019ve heard Swedish doctors call it a \u201cbreakpoint  discussion,\u201d a systematic series of conversations to sort out when they  need to switch from fighting for time to fighting for the other things  that people value\u2014being with family or travelling or enjoying chocolate  ice cream. Few people have this discussion, and there is good reason for  anyone to dread these conversations. They can unleash difficult  emotions. People can become angry or overwhelmed. Handled poorly, the  conversations can cost a person\u2019s trust. Handled well, they can take  real time.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div><span style=\"line-height: 24px; font-size: 16px;\">I  spoke to an oncologist who told me about a twenty-nine-year-old patient  she had recently cared for who had an inoperable brain tumor that  continued to grow through second-line chemotherapy. The patient elected  not to attempt any further chemotherapy, but getting to that decision  required hours of discussion\u2014for this was not the decision he had  expected to make. First, the oncologist said, she had a discussion with  him alone. They reviewed the story of how far he\u2019d come, the options  that remained. She was frank. She told him that in her entire career she  had never seen third-line chemotherapy produce a significant response  in his type of brain tumor. She had looked for experimental therapies,  and none were truly promising. And, although she was willing to proceed  with chemotherapy, she told him how much strength and time the treatment  would take away from him and his family.<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>He did not shut down or  rebel. His questions went on for an hour. He asked about this therapy  and that therapy. And then, gradually, he began to ask about what would  happen as the tumor got bigger, the symptoms he\u2019d have, the ways they  could try to control them, how the end might come.<\/p>\n<p>The oncologist  next met with the young man together with his family. That discussion  didn\u2019t go so well. He had a wife and small children, and at first his  wife wasn\u2019t ready to contemplate stopping chemo. But when the oncologist  asked the patient to explain in his own words what they\u2019d discussed,  she understood. It was the same with his mother, who was a nurse.  Meanwhile, his father sat quietly and said nothing the entire time.<\/p>\n<p>A few days later, the patient returned to talk to the oncologist. \u201cThere should be something. There <em>must<\/em> be something,\u201d he said. His father had shown him reports of cures on  the Internet. He confided how badly his father was taking the news. No  patient wants to cause his family pain. According to Block, about  two-thirds of patients are willing to undergo therapies they don\u2019t want  if that is what their loved ones want.<\/p>\n<p>The oncologist went to the  father\u2019s home to meet with him. He had a sheaf of possible trials and  treatments printed from the Internet. She went through them all. She was  willing to change her opinion, she told him. But either the treatments  were for brain tumors that were very different from his son\u2019s or else he  didn\u2019t qualify. None were going to be miraculous. She told the father  that he needed to understand: time with his son was limited, and the  young man was going to need his father\u2019s help getting through it.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div id=\"articlebody\">\n<div id=\"articletext\">\n<p>The  oncologist noted wryly how much easier it would have been for her just  to prescribe the chemotherapy. \u201cBut that meeting with the father was the  turning point,\u201d she said. The patient and the family opted for hospice.  They had more than a month together before he died. Later, the father  thanked the doctor. That last month, he said, the family simply focussed  on being together, and it proved to be the most meaningful time they\u2019d  ever spent.<\/p>\n<p>Given how prolonged some of these conversations have  to be, many people argue that the key problem has been the financial  incentives: we pay doctors to give chemotherapy and to do surgery, but  not to take the time required to sort out when doing so is unwise. This  certainly is a factor. (The new health-reform act was to have added  Medicare coverage for these conversations, until it was deemed funding  for \u201cdeath panels\u201d and stripped out of the legislation.) But the issue  isn\u2019t merely a matter of financing. It arises from a still unresolved  argument about what the function of medicine really is\u2014what, in other  words, we should and should not be paying for doctors to do.<\/p>\n<p>The  simple view is that medicine exists to fight death and disease, and that  is, of course, its most basic task. Death is the enemy. But the enemy  has superior forces. Eventually, it wins. And, in a war that you cannot  win, you don\u2019t want a general who fights to the point of total  annihilation. You don\u2019t want Custer. You want Robert E. Lee, someone who  knew how to fight for territory when he could and how to surrender when  he couldn\u2019t, someone who understood that the damage is greatest if all  you do is fight to the bitter end.<\/p>\n<p>More often, these days,  medicine seems to supply neither Custers nor Lees. We are increasingly  the generals who march the soldiers onward, saying all the while, \u201cYou  let me know when you want to stop.\u201d All-out treatment, we tell the  terminally ill, is a train you can get off at any time\u2014just say when.  But for most patients and their families this is asking too much. They  remain riven by doubt and fear and desperation; some are deluded by a  fantasy of what medical science can achieve. But our responsibility, in  medicine, is to deal with human beings as they are. People die only  once. They have no experience to draw upon. They need doctors and nurses  who are willing to have the hard discussions and say what they have  seen, who will help people prepare for what is to come\u2014and to escape a  warehoused oblivion that few really want.<\/p>\n<p>Sara  Monopoli had had enough discussions to let her family and her oncologist  know that she did not want hospitals or I.C.U.s at the end\u2014but not  enough to have learned how to achieve this. From the moment she arrived  in the emergency room that Friday morning in February, the train of  events ran against a peaceful ending. There was one person who was  disturbed by this, though, and who finally decided to intercede\u2014Chuck  Morris, her primary physician. As her illness had progressed through the  previous year, he had left the decision-making largely to Sara, her  family, and the oncology team. Still, he had seen her and her husband  regularly, and listened to their concerns. That desperate morning,  Morris was the one person Rich called before getting into the ambulance.  He headed to the emergency room and met Sara and Rich when they  arrived.<\/p>\n<div>\n<div><span style=\"line-height: 24px; font-size: 16px;\">Morris  said that the pneumonia might be treatable. But, he told Rich, \u201cI\u2019m  worried this is it. I\u2019m really worried about her.\u201d And he told him to  let the family know that he said so.<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Upstairs in her hospital  room, Morris talked with Sara and Rich about the ways in which the  cancer had been weakening her, making it hard for her body to fight off  infection. Even if the antibiotics halted the infection, he said, he  wanted them to remember that there was nothing that would stop the  cancer.<\/p>\n<p>Sara looked ghastly, Morris told me. \u201cShe was so short of  breath. It was uncomfortable to watch. I still remember the  attending\u201d\u2014the oncologist who admitted her for the pneumonia treatment.  \u201cHe was actually kind of rattled about the whole case, and for him to be  rattled is saying something.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>After her parents arrived, Morris  talked with them, too, and when they were finished Sara and her family  agreed on a plan. The medical team would continue the antibiotics. But  if things got worse they would not put her on a breathing machine. They  also let him call the palliative-care team to visit. The team prescribed  a small dose of morphine, which immediately eased her breathing. Her  family saw how much her suffering diminished, and suddenly they didn\u2019t  want any more suffering. The next morning, they were the ones to hold  back the medical team.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThey wanted to put a catheter in her, do this other stuff to her,\u201d her mother, Dawn, told me. \u201cI said, \u2018<em>No<\/em>.  You aren\u2019t going to do anything to her.\u2019 I didn\u2019t care if she wet her  bed. They wanted to do lab tests, blood-pressure measurements, finger  sticks. I was very uninterested in their bookkeeping. I went over to see  the head nurse and told them to stop.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the previous three  months, almost nothing we\u2019d done to Sara\u2014none of our chemotherapy and  scans and tests and radiation\u2014had likely achieved anything except to  make her worse. She may well have lived longer without any of it. At  least she was spared at the very end.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>That  day, Sara fell into unconsciousness as her body continued to fail.  Through the next night, Rich recalled, \u201cthere was this awful groaning.\u201d  There is no prettifying death. \u201cWhether it was with inhaling or  exhaling, I don\u2019t remember, but it was horrible, horrible, horrible to  listen to.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Her father and her sister still thought that she  might rally. But when the others had stepped out of the room, Rich knelt  down weeping beside Sara and whispered in her ear. \u201cIt\u2019s O.K. to let  go,\u201d he said. \u201cYou don\u2019t have to fight anymore. I will see you soon.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Later that morning, her breathing changed, slowing. At 9:45 A.M., Rich said, \u201cSara just kind of startled. She let a long breath out. Then she just stopped.\u201d \u2666<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/reporting\/2010\/08\/02\/100802fa_fact_gawande#ixzz182Yukzz6\"><br \/>\n<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Letting Go What should medicine do when it can\u2019t save your life? by Atul Gawande August 2, 2010 Modern medicine is good at staving off death with aggressive interventions\u2014and bad at knowing when to focus, instead, on improving the days &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/?page_id=408\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":88,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-408","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/408","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=408"}],"version-history":[{"count":29,"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/408\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":410,"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/408\/revisions\/410"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/88"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.finaljourneyseminars.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=408"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}