Title: ZINC 96
1 THE RIGHT TO LIVE AND DIE WITH DIGNITY AT
HOME Supporting Terminally Ill Patients who Wish
to Live out Their Lives at Home
ISRAEL S. BERGER, M.D. DORON GARFINKEL, M.D.
MACCABI HEALTHCARE SERVICES
HOME CARE UNIT - DAN DISTRICT
2 HOME
HOSPITAL
3BACKGROUND
1
- Aging is inevitably associated with an
exponential increase in the incidence and
complexity of chronic, age - related diseases.
Therefore, a net increase in survival would
translate into more years of compromised
physical, mental and social functioning. Improved
medical technology in the last decades has
resulted in a sharp increase in life span even
for patients suffering from chronic and terminal
diseases. Accordingly, the average length of
survival since a patient is first classified as
non-curative until death, is increasing all the
time. - Some terminally ill patients and their
families prefer to live at home even in the
presence of severe debilitating disease, and for
them hospitalization may represent a severe
impairment of their quality of life. Obviously,
due to the very high cost of hospitalization
particularly in the last months or weeks of life,
treating terminally ill patients at home is also
a desirable goal for all medical systems.
Paradoxically, physicians and health
professionals sometimes pressure these patients
to spend their last period of life away from home
even if there is no apparent advantage of
hospital over home care. This in part, may be an
attempt to relieve the heavy medical and legal
responsibility of caring for dying people at
home. - However, the comprehensive palliative
approach insists on helping patients at every
stage of their disease by relieving physical
suffering and also attempting to alleviate
mental, familial, social and financial problems.
Palliative care should be given according to the
patients individual needs, whether they wish to
receive it in an institutional setting or at
home.
4 2
- PATIENTS and METHODS
- Over the past year, our Home Care team
has been taking care of about 350 different
patients, several dozens died, most of them in an
institutional setting. Fifteen families of
terminally ill patients requested that the
patient live at home until death. They all
realized that the patient had no cure and we
repeatedly discussed with them in depth, the
possibilities and limitations of palliative care.
In each case, there was a consensus between
family and patient (unless the later had severe
dementia) that the patient should stay at home
no matter what happens, even if the situation
worsens, symptoms aggravate or death occurs. We
enabled them to accomplish this by providing a 24
hour medical availability. In most patient the
physician was also present at the patients beds
in their last hours at home. - RESULTS
- There were 11 men, four women, most of them
were living with a spouse who also served as the
primary care giver in about half of the cases.
The average period of treatment by our team was
several months, range - one week to several years
(in one patient with severe dementia). The main
disease that eventually led to death was advanced
cancer in seven patients others suffered from
end stage liver failure, amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS), end stage pulmonary fibrosis and
dementia. The age upon death ranged from 63 to
93 In all patients, only palliative care was
given, most of them died with mild or no pain,
with very few distressing symptoms during the
last days of their life. In most patients, the
Home Care physician was present at the time of
death and signed the death certificate.
5 3
- CONCLUSION
- A proper medical support group can enable
patients and families who wish to die at home, to
do so with dignity while experiencing a
reasonable quality of life before death.
Furthermore, applying this approach to large
populations of incurable patients would probably
have beneficial economic and social implications
as well.
6 FACTORS AFFECTING THE DECISION TO STAY AT HOME
WILLINGNESS OF PATIENT FAMILY
CLEAR DIAGNOSIS PROGNOSIS
SEVERITY OF SYMPTOMS
7 ETHICAL CONFLICT SCALE OF TERMINAL PATIENTS
FAMILIES WHO WISH TO LIVE OUT THEIR LIVES AT
HOME A SUGGESTION BASED ON PERSONAL EXPERIENCE
WITH PATIENTS OF OUR HOME CARE UNIT
- 1). NO REAL CONFLICT - A PATIENT WAITING FOR A
VITAL ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION (HEART, LUNG,
LIVER,KIDNEYS). MEDICINE HAS NOTHING ELSE TO
OFFER NO MATTER WHERE THE PATIENT STAYS. - 2). A PATIENT WITH WIDESPREAD METASTATIC DISEASE
CLASSIFIED BY THE ONCOLOGIST AS INCURABLE, AFTER
ALL KNOWN CURATIVE MEANS HAVE BEEN EXHAUSTED. - 3). A PATIENT SUFFERING FROM MUSCULAR ATROPHY
(eg. ALS) WHO HAS UNEQUIVOCALLY EXPRESSED HIS
REFUSAL TO BE TRANFERED TO A HOSPITAL AND/OR BE
CONNECTED TO ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATORS, IN CASE OF
RESPIRATORY DETERIORATION. - 4). A PATIENT SUFFERING FROM DEMENTIA AND
ANOTHER CHRONIC DISEASE, WHO EXPERIENCES REPEATED
EPISODES OF UNCONSCIOUSNESS OR COMA WITH NO
SYMPTOMS OF SUFFERING. - 5). A PATIENT SUFFERING FROM DEMENTIA WHO STOPS
EATING AND/OR DOES NOT COMMUNICATE - REFUSAL OF FORCED FEEDING HAS BEEN
EXPRESSED - EITHER BY THE PATIENT IN THE PAST OR
BY THE FAMILY NOW. - 6). A PATIENT WHO INSISTS ON STAYING AT HOME
INSPITE OF SEVERE, DIFFICULT TO CONTROL SYMPTOMS
(eg. SUFFOCATION, DYSPNEA, MASSIVE BLEEDING,
RECURRENT ENCEPHALOPATHIES). - 7). A PATIENT IN WHOM A PRIMARY MALIGNANT
TUMOR HAS BEEN REMOVED, WHO EXPERIENCES - DECONDITIONING (INCREASED FUNCTIONAL
DETERIORATION WITH NO PRECISE DIAGNOSIS TO - EXPLAIN IT), BUT WISHES TO LIVE THE REST
OF HIS LIFE AT HOME. - OR A PATIENT WITH HIGH PROBABILITY OF MALIGNANT
DISEASE, WHO REFUSES FURTHER EVALUATION - OR THERAPY AND WISHES TO LIVE THE REST OF
HIS LIFE AT HOME. - (FORMAL HOSPICE SERVICES ARE NOT PROVIDED
TO PATIENTS WITH NO CLEAR DIAGNOSIS OF
MALIGNANCY)