TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! ANSI
echo: indian_affairs
to: SONDRA BALL
from: KAY NEWMAN
date: 1997-01-27 21:45:00
subject: frustrating doctors

Sondra,
So very sorry to hear about your friend and his family. Dr's
should go along with his wishes. Will keep everyone in prayer.
God Bless,
Kay
 SB> Yesterday I got to learn some of what other people mean when they talk
 SB> of doctors being impossible to deal with when someone is dying.  An
 SB> older friend of mine is dying.  He is just a few weeks shy of 90.  He
 SB> had a heart attack and a major stroke that destroyed the entire right
 SB> side of his brain.  He has developed pneumonia and a blood clot in his
 SB> leg.  He has almost no speech, and will never walk or sit up
 SB> independently again. He can't even swallow liquids, and is dependent
 SB> on a feeding tube for hydration. This is a man who has always been
 SB> physically active and "sharp as a whip."  The hospital wanted to place
 SB> him in the county nursing home.  He made it clear to everyone that he
 SB> wanted to go home. And it was just as clear that he had thought it out
 SB> (hey, even with only half a brain, he's *still* sharp as a whip"), and
 SB> that he is ready to die.  The doctors refused to let him go home,
 SB> despite his wishes. Finally, the family arived at the hospital
 SB> yesterday, intending to remove him against medical consent if
 SB> necessary. The doctor spent hours trying to talk the family out of
 SB> removing my
 SB> friend.  The doctor even, literally, called them murderers.  If he
 SB> goes home, no tubes attached, he will be dead in a few days to a
 SB> month.  If
 SB> they send him to a nursing home, tubes attached, he could be kept
 SB> alive, although unable to read, write, move around, or talk, for maybe
 SB> even a
 SB> couple of years. This man has a "living will" in which he asked that
 SB> no extraordinary measures be used to keep him alive.  When his veins
 SB> started collapsing, so they couldn't keep the IV in them, the doctors
 SB> put a port in his shoulder so they could keep giving him medicines
 SB> through the IV.  His daughter protested, saying she thought this was
 SB> "extraordinary measures".  The doctor said it was "a grey area", and
 SB> could be defended in a court of law.  My friend was brought home, but
 SB> not until after hours of wrangling, and not until after everyone was
 SB> emotionally exhausted.  His wife and two daughters were literally in
 SB> tears.  His son was close to murder. His grandchildren were frantic.
 SB> The medical profession has refused to sign the forms that would give
 SB> maximum home care.  They have refused to list him as "terminal", which
 SB> would open up the way for home hospice care, because "he would live
 SB> longer if you weren't murdering him."  Medicare will pay for two hours
 SB> nursing care three times a week.  Family and friends will take up the
 SB> slack.
 SB> The dying is not the problem here.  My friend knows he is dying, and
 SB> is ready to pass over to the other side.  We know he is dying, and are
 SB> ready to sit with him as he passes on.  It is only the doctors who
 SB> cannot accept his dying.  Are they *that* terrified of mortality, that
 SB> this one frail old man's death will devastate them?
 SB>                                    Sondra
 SB> -*-
 SB>  þ SLMR 2.1a þ There is no royal road to geometry.  Euclid
 SB> --- Opus-CBCS 1.7x via O_QWKer 1.1
... Kay Newman  --  Rochester, NY  --  kwnewman@rochgte.fidonet.org
--- PPoint 2.02
---------------
SB> * Origin: the fifth age - milford ct - 203-876-1473 (1:141/355.0)
* Origin: Kay's Place Rochester, NY (1:2613/333.11)

SOURCE: echomail via exec-pc

Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.