End of life treatment: Teddy got ice cream
Barbara
Moran’s story:
I dreamed
about Teddy Kennedy. He had died a few
days earlier, and his memorial services had blanketed the Boston news. I was jealous of Kennedy. He spent the last days at home, smelling the
salt of the ocean. He ate bowls of
butter crunch ice cream, watched James Bond movies and shared dinner with
friends.
I’m sure Kennedy’s death had its share of
horror, but that didn’t curb my envy. Teddy
got ice cream; my mom got a sterile sponge soaked in warm ginger ale. Ted got the ocean; Mom got a gritty rooftop
with a windsock. Ted got his own bed and
movies; Mom got the blinking lights of the I.C.U. and the stupid C.A.R.E.
channel. Her TV didn’t even have good
reception.
She did not regain consciousness, and died
the next morning. I made peace with her death, but not with her dying. She had four months of endless and pointless
and painful procedures, and final days full of fear and despair. Why is this medicine’s default death for so
many people?
Ken's Advice: Have the difficult conversation with your
oldest relatives. Start like this: while eating ice cream with them, tell them
what flavor you want in your last meal, tell them about Teddy’s butter crunch,
and ask theirs.
Read a story about a ”http://patientadvocare.blogspot.com/2007/01/art-buchwalds-choice.html”>contented
end of life.
Thanks to
science writer http://www.writtenbybarbaramoran.com/”>Barbara
Moran for her story, reprinted from today’s New York Times article,
“Not Just a Death, a System Failure.”
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