|
Response to Parliamentary Committee
on Palliative and Compassionate Care
By Philip Ney MD, FRCP(C) for Mount Joy College
9/11/10
OUR LIVES IN THE BALANCE, Part I
CAN YOU TRUST DOCTORS?
The usual discussions of euthanasia, concentrate on the object
and seldom mention its
effect on the subject, namely the medical profession. You need
to realize that euthanasia
will put the final nail in the coffin of what we have come to
accept as a noble profession.
It is rapidly becoming ignoble and not trust-worthy.
Role-play. ( Pythagoras, played by Anastasia Pearse, a very bright
UVic student.)
H Good morning, Pythagoras, How are you old man?
P. Good morning to you Doctor Hippocrates.(1) If you really want
to know and I
suspect you dont, Im miserable. Cant sleep,
pained in body and troubled in
mind. Yes Im old but you are not far behind me. Some day
youll be feeble
too, Doc.
H. Your mind is quite good. I am impressed with your theorem on
squares of
adjacent sides etc. Well, you can be thankful to modern medicine.
Straight from
the Royal Apothecary in Alexandria, I have just what you need.
Sit up and take
a good sip. Then repeat every 2hours.
P. Hang on; what is it?
H. A potent combination of ascorbic acid, and.......
P. And hemlock.
H. My goodness you are suspicious.
P. I dont trust you doctors. You think its a kindness
to kill as well as cure.
H. Well, I admit it is common practice among us Greek Doctors
in compassion to send
people on their way when the gods have cursed them and they cannot
get better.
P. I dont think I want to die just yet. On the other hand,
although my mind is alert,
my body is often giving me grief.
H. Well this will give you a boost.
P Yeah, a boost right into eternity. I saw you making eyes at
my wife. You figure to
send me on then take her and my estate. With your attitude about
dying with dignity
from hemlock, no patient will ever trust your or your ilk.
H. I promise this is to ease your pain and give you rest.
P The dead feel no pain.
H. Look you old curmudgeon. Im not going to spend all day
trying to persuade you
to take something thats good for what ails you.
P. Give me time to make up my mind.
H. My patience has run out. Take it or leave it.
P. Your bullying me makes me all the more suspicious.
H. This is ridiculous. But I suppose you have reason to not trust
us. I do find it hard
trying to persuade my patients to cooperate. There has got to
be a better way
Okay, lets see if this works.
(With arms raised to the sky and shouting.
By Jupiter, by Hermes, and Aesculapius, Apollo and Zeus. I swear
I will not
poison you or any other patient. In fact, so all my patients will
learn to trust me, I also
swear not to have sex with patients or abort a woman.
P. Good grief, I think you really mean it. Okay Doc. Let me have
it. (Drinks noisily
and smiles) Not bad. But dont think that because I trusted
you this time, I will
always trust you. How do I know what you believe a year from now?
H. I will hang a statement of my ethics in my office so you will
know what I will do
on the really big issues. Know this for sure; I will always try
to make you better.
P. Even so, it will take a few centuries to build patient confidence
in doctors and it
wouldnt take much to set it all back. The main problem is
that you doctors want
power over life and death, healing and terminating human existence,
curing or killing.
That power is too much for any man or woman. It will always corrupt.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------
MORE RECENT HISTORY ON DYING WITH DIGNITY
The Psychiatric Institute, Hadamar in 1941 celebrated.(2) All
the staff were given
bottle of beer for the occasion. What was the occasion? Out of
compassion they had
just liquidated 10,000 psychopedic patients.
By 1945, 300,000 German psychiatric and psychopeadic patients
died at the
hands of compassionate staff.
But, you say, these were cruel German, not like us loving Anglo
Saxons.
Or you may say that was the nasty Nazis. German euthanasia began
with the
publication of the book by Hoch and Binding, a psychiatrist and
a jurist, in 1928. It
was titled, The Release for Destruction of Lives Devoid of Value.
This was well
before the Nazis came to power. The Nazis took over the rational
and process, which
was well established and used it for their own nefarious purposes.
When will people learn from history?
Do you trust doctors? Do I trust doctors? Not entirely.
After 50years as a physician, teaching in 5 med schools in 3 countries,
full
professor x 4, academic and clinical department head, plenty of
scientific articles and
books, including one on palliative care, (3) I have learned that
doctors are people like
all others. Some you cannot trust. Others you can only trust under
regulated
conditions. A lot are well intentioned and well trained but there
is historic evidence
that they can also become self serving and lethal.
I have treated approximately 3200 people who wanted to die. I
learned that
although they ostensibly wanted to commit suicide and often wished
there was
someone to help them do it, none wanted to be dead. What they
wanted was better
living, not oblivion.
When trust of physicians goes down, cost of medical care escalates.
Why?
a) Time to persuade to take meds, properly. Compliance in taking
medication,
long term, is about 50 to 60% and diminishing.
b) Patients want more tests and investigations
c) They request more 2nd opinions
d) People delay in seeing a doctor.
e) Decline in the therapeutic placebo effect.
f) Physicians must take longer time to obtain informed consent.
g) The general population has greater preoccupation with their
health and
emphasize small complaints.
h) Doctors must spend more time in court defending themselves
against growing
malpractice suits and the allegations of suspicious patients.(4)
It has taken 23 centuries to establish a modicum of trust in the
medical
profession. The whole structure of modern medicine depends on
trust. It is now
being rapidly dismantled. The physicians are the largest contributors.
Recognizing they could never practice without patient trust and
confidence,
Hippocrates and his colleagues swore by their gods to never poison
a patient, have
sex with patients or abort pregnancies. Doctors are doing all
3 with increasing
frequency. Nurses are not far behind them. It is small wonder
patient trust is rapidly
diminishing and costs are spirally upward.
Requiring physicians to assist suicides so a few people could
die with dignity
would be the final, fatal blow to modern medicine. Physicians
providing doctor
assisted death (dad) voluntarily would be worse.
What is the physicians best recourse for refusing to be
involved in providing
lethal injections, terminating preborn babies lives or giving
sperm for IVF? Simply to
say, I refuse to practice poor medicine. And he/she
would be supported by medical
science. There is ample evidence that abortion, doctor assisted
suicide and sex with
patients, (Yes some doctors have the very twisted notion that
their having sex with
patients is therapeutic), is bad medicine.
Margaret Mead, commenting on Hipporates, wrote. This was an amazing
break
with the universal dual role of physicians curing and killing.
She insisted that the law
and public opinion, must never let physicians revert to the pre-Hippocratic
times.
Modern physicians appear to substitute popularity for trust. They
seem to think
that now she distrusts me, she may cooperate with this examination
because she likes
me. To be popular, the physician must be agreeable, with a tendency
to provide his
patients with treatment they chose. They will accommodate the
patients chose of
pregnancy termination and agree with the patients reasons
she so chooses. It isnt
surprising that eventually this physician has a cupboard well
stocked with samples
and allows the patient to chose what they would like to try next.
We must always ask of any proposal for palliative care, does it
work? Does it
result in: better care, lower costs, and greater trust in the
caring profession. None of
these ideas can be supported on ideals. Physicians and patients
must be pragmatic. Is
this any better than what we have in place? What is the hard evidence
euthanasia is a
good practice?
I asked the person gently putting forward the Dying With Dignity
position, Does
it work. Do you know if people when dying (from a lethal injection)
feel dignified?
(Silence). It appears that you dont know if they die with
more or less dignity. Then
how can you promote a process if you dont know works? On
the other hand, there is
biochemical evidence that at the point of death, people feel terrified
or for some, great
excitement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPECIES SPECIFIC INSTINCTUAL RESTRAINT OF AGGRESSION, SSIRA.
Homo sapiens seems to be the only species that wants to self-destruct.
Most of
society struggles to contain that tendency.
Helplessness evokes: disgust, avoidance and destruction or nurture
and protection.
There is very delicate balance. Unbalanced the species will be
destroyed.
A seagull, tied by one leg, flaps about helplessly. Just because
it is helpless, it will
be attacked by other members of its flock. Like the wounded in
war or patients in
hospital are bayoneted in a frenzy uncharacteristic of the soldiers
under usual
circumstances. That tendency to mutilate and kill the disgusting
helpless is countered
by the Species Specific Instinctual Restraint of Aggression. SSIRA
keeps all species
from killing and devouring their own kind.
Almost any parent awakened at 2:30 am after a difficult day by
a screaming child
in the room next door, feels an irritation bordering on destructive
rage. It only
increases as she or he stumbles down the hall bumping into hard
objects. Yet when
they switch on the light, look on their distressed baby, the anger
quickly subsides and
is replace by a feeling of warm concern. This amazing transformation
is mediated
mainly by their SSIRA.
SSIRA is strongest when other factors, religion, mores, laws are
weakest. It is
most powerful in protecting the young, wounded, weak, feeble,
handicapped and all
those whose reasons for existing seem to have no justification.
If anyone overcomes the instinctual restraint (SSIRA), even once
in order to kill, it
is significantly easier for him or her to harm or to kill again.
SSIRA is most damaged
when anyone kills in cold blood, especially if the victim is an
infant, or enfeebled family
member. It does not need to be a violent act. It can be agreeing
to have someone do the
deed.
It appears that the weakened or damaged SSIRA is not easily repaired.
That person
is different and they tend to know it, for life.
A soldier who has killed another senses a change. It makes it
hard to speak of his
war experiences with any pride. A mother who has seriously attacked
her child, from
that point is very careful with her anger and tends to want others
to care for her child in
daycare. A physician who has aborted babies feels a deep shame,
not only for what
he/she has done but also because of who they have become. Doctors
who assist in some
old persons suicide intuitively do not trust themselves
and intuitively are not as well
trusted by their patients, especially the elderly ones.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
GUILT LOADED GRIEF, (GLG)
If in fact or fantasy, anyone contributes to the death of family
or friend, especially
those handicapped or small or elderly, guilt inevitably ensues.
This is a biologically
based guilt, which has nothing very much to do with morals or
beliefs.
Grief mixed with guilt doesnt often resolve. It results
in pathological, or
prolonged grief. This grief is easily mistaken for depression.
Antidepressants are
usually given. Because one must walk thru grief, feeling intensely
the whole gamut of
emotions: loss, regret, anger, abandonment, despair, etc. antidepressants
that mute
these feelings, prolong or prorogue mourning.
Grief is the almost inevitable experience of every human. It has
now become a
treatment resistant depression. Sadly, most physicians, instead
of aiding their patients
with the root cause, prescribe more antidepressant. They claim
there is an underlying
chemical imbalance for which their patient must take the antidepressant
for life.
Case illustration. Joe was referred to me by his family physician
because he was
depressed and suicidal. It began after his beloved mother died.
His family was very
poor but his mother always well fed him and his sister even if
it meant going without
food herself. As she aged, Joe and his sister placed her in a
comfortable care home
and visited almost every day.
The mother deteriorated and so had to be transferred to a facility
with more
services. She sorely missed her friends in the previous place
and began to withdraw.
Her physician places her on antidepressant, which made her regress
more quickly.
Eventually Joe and his sister agreed to the kind physicians suggestion
that it was time
to let their mother pass on. Shes had
a good life and you wouldnt want to see her
suffer like this anymore would you?
Joe kept visiting daily. He watched his mother suffer the agonies
of death by
starvation and dehydration. The nurse even refused to moisten
her cracked lips. I
watched my mother starve to death. My loving mother who fed me
when she
wouldnt feed herself, slowly died before my eyes, and it
was my fault. I know Ill
never be the same. I dont deserve to be happy again.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE REAL EXPERIENCE OF DEATH
Although there are a wide variety of near death experiences (NDE),
no human
has returned from the death to describe the final experience.
However examining the
body and its biochemistry can give some critical clues.
The stress of agony (the death struggle) induces a rise
in serum
catecholamines(5) Another study found that at post mortem,
there are significantly
elevated hormones regardless of palliative medication given. That
study was seeking
to determine, which drugs or combination of drugs was most effective
in easing pain
and discomfort when dying.
Adrenaline, noradrenaline and dopamine levels were related to
the cause of
death. One cause of death that resulted in high levels was poisoning.(6)
If this is
true, then one can infer that doctor assisted death is more of
a struggle than those who
promote it believe it to be.
This high level of stress hormones seems to indicate that at the
point of death
there is either terror or extreme excitement. That final experience
may depend on
which way the dead one is headed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
REASONS PEOPLE APPEAR TO PREFER DOCTER ASSISTED DEATH.(DAD)
A recent study of Oregons experience with doctor-assisted
death found that the
reasons people chose DAD was not pain control but because they
didnt want to be a
burden, they wanted to avoid losing control of their mind and
or body. It seemed that
to the last they wanted to control their own destiny, rather than
have it plucked from
their hands.
A careless or naughty child breaks his mothers precious
ancient Chinese vase.
They know they are really going to get it when dad gets
home. The suspense is
awful. But mum hasnt noticed and dad doesnt punish
them and they feel they
deserve. Why dont they just get it over with,
he mutters to himself. It must be
because they are thinking up some really awful punishment.
Next day he decides that the anticipation of his fate is worse
than the fate itself.
Im going to make dad punish me now. So in full
view of his parents, he
deliberately breaks something else.
Maybe these people, in an effort to control their destiny, demand
to have this one
last, psuedo-brave choice and not be in the hands
of someone who may, sooner or
later, will take them to task. Maybe they tend to be control
freaks
Just maybe, there is some value in losing ones dignity,
which is usually part of
pride. Maybe when people are more humble, they will finally come
to grips with
unresolved family and spiritual issues.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEATH TO PRESERVE THE DIGNITY FAMILY AND OBSERVERS.
For anyone with an ounce of empathy, it is painful to watch another
person die.
I cant bear to see him suffer like this It
tears me apart to hear her choke and
groan So the families choice to end his/ her suffering is
primarily for their own
benefit. There are many other very selfish reason that those into
whose surrogate
hands, the decision to pull the plug is given:
a) I just dont have the time to keep visiting.
b) My struggling business needs my time but I feel so guilty
when I dont visit
c) My children suffer watching granny dying at our home
like she wanted
d) If I were her, I know I wouldnt want to suffer
any more
e)We are desperately in debt right now.
f) Whats in the will would solve all our problems.
g) She keeps pleading, let me go
There are many more possible and plausible reasons thought, some
expressed
but more privately felt. Traumatic situations like dying tend
to bring out the most
intense ambivalence in everyone toward life and living. Anyone
can be made to
despair, though it may be short lived.
What children fear more than anything is being abandoned? That
fear recurs
throughout life and when it does, many people respond with, Well
now that he is
gone, I might as well kill myself. But the loss can be the
anticipated loss of oneself.
It should be remembered that suicide is murder. I was often able
to illicit
helpful insights with the question, If you werent
going to murder yourself, who
would it be?
The most useful method I found to keep people from wanting to
kill themselves
was to: a) understand and empathize with the patients experience
which is usually
feeling trapped. b) To offer realistic hope and when necessary
bargain for what is
tolerable. This is not, Well make you feel as good
as new, but We can ease the
discomfort by at least 15%. Is that acceptable? c) Make
or renew a commitment to
stick with the patient to the end, be it wellness or death.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE VALUE OF DEPENDENCY
Most people fear becoming dependent on others for short
periods like having a
fractured right arm. The thought of being dependent for the remainder
of their lives is
most distressing. I would rather kill myself, than have
my son and daughter in-law
be responsible for me till I die. If you then ask why, you
will find a number of
contradictory responses.
i) Fear of rejection. They will grow to resent me; even
wish I
was dead
ii) Pride. I have looked after myself and everyone else
almost
all my life. I would be ashamed to have anyone care for me
iii) Fear of own dependency. I would love to be totally
cared
for but Im afraid to say so.
iv) False courage. I have been through 2 wars and nothing
stopped me. Im not going to back away from death now.
Go ahead, bring it on and see if I flinch.
v) Fear of revenge. I know I havent been good to my
kids.
I even aborted some of them. Now is their chance to get
even. But I will beat them to the punch.
On the other hand I have heard some people say. Im
glad my mother had to
admit she could not look after herself anymore. She was always
so proud; she
wouldnt let me do anything. Now I can bath and dress her.
She even lets me cuddle
close and lie still
Being dependent can be a gift. After all, under normal conditions,
caring for
those who can no longer care for themselves brings out the best
in us. It teaches us to
be loving
If people were given assisted death before they became really
dependent on their
family or if they were cared for only by those paid to do so,
I believe that people
would develop little capacity to love. They would become even
more narcisstic than
they are now.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
OUR GOVERNMENTS VAIN PURSUIT
The Canadian Federal Government is holding meetings across the
country in order to
find ways to stop people wishing to have doctor assisted death.
If they wont
consider the spiritual parameter, they will find no satisfactory
answer.
Stranger (S) Hello chaps. What are you all doing?
Government types. (GTs) We are trying to find a way to make
this thing fly.
S. What have you tried so far?
GTs. Well, we beefed up the engine
And we improved the landing gear
Its now got new tires
The cabin is much more comfortable
S. I dont want to sound arrogant but how about attaching
wings.
GTs Who do you think you are?
Dont be so ridiculous.
Get lost.
The fear of dying is almost universal in people. Their Creator
made them with a
built in aversion and abhorrence of dying. Why? Because He wanted
them to
enjoy living and survive as long as possible, struggling to live
even under the most
extreme conditions. He did not want them to embrace death. Death
was His
enemy. It should be theirs also.
The fear of being dead depends on where you are convinced you
are going
when you die.
So unless, the government is going to help people deal with their
existential
questions of life after death, they may as well save taxpayers
money.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THERE IS AN ANSWER, THANK GOD.
Since death is the 3rd most important event in ones life,
there should be some
preparation and help in dying. There are at least 10 important
tasks that need to be
completed before taking off. Those who do these may have some
residual fear of
dying, but no fear of death. (7)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A few references:
1. Edelstein I. The genuine works of Hippocrates. Bull Hist Med,
1939:
7:236-48.
2. Wertham F. A Sign of Cain: an exploration of human violence.
New
York, Macmillan, 1966.
3. Ney,PG Ethical dilemmas in psychiatry. New Zealand Med.J. 1983,
98:
939-41
4. Murray WGD. Increasing litigation: the size of settlements
in
professional negligence. Lancet 1982,1:1063-4.
5. Hausdorfer C, Pedal I, Zimmer G, Remppis A, Strobel G Arch
Kriminol. Catecholamine, myofibrillary degeneration of the heart
muscle
and cardiac tropin T in various types of agony. Arch Kriminol.
1995; 196
(1-2):46-57.
6. Zhu BL, Ishikawa T, Michiue T, Li DR, et al. Postmortem serum
catecholamine levels in relation to the cause of death. Forensic
Sci Int.
2007; 173(2-3):122-9
7. Ney PG, Christian Principles of Palliative Care. Victoria,
Pioneer
Publishing, 2007.
|