Death & Dying - New York Medical College
Download
Report
Transcript Death & Dying - New York Medical College
End of Life Issues:
Death and Dying /
Grief and Loss
Sally Schwab, Ph.D., C.S.W.
Clinical Assistant Professor of
Medicine
Why is This Topic Important?
60% of people in this country die in a
hospital
5-10% of the population lose a relative
each year
Death/loss is a major cause of adverse
health effects: the widowed have higher
death rates compared to married couples
Death is a taboo subject
There are many misperceptions re: dying
and mourning
Physicians are not taught how to talk about
end of life issues
Objectives: By the end of today,
you will be able to:
Define the protocol for delivering bad news
Demonstrate helpful ways to communicate
with patients who are dying
Define the terms mourning, grief and
bereavement
Identify the tasks of mourning
Describe the different ways people mourn
Recognize normal and abnormal aspects of
mourning
Describe the role of the physician re: dying
patients and their families
The Role of the Physician
Getting to know your patient
Diagnosis / prognosis
Delivery of news
Collaborating with your patient
Understanding your patient’s wishes and values
Management of communication of information
Management of disease, treatment, pain, death
Discussion of advanced directives
Definition of Bad News
Any news that adversely and
seriously affects an individual’s view
of his or her future.
Bad news is not only about cancer or
death
Breaking Bad News
Breaking bad news is difficult
Feelings of helplessness
Sadness for the patient
Desire to rescue the patient
Cultural differences
Not all people from all cultures want
to be told their diagnosis
While 95% of patients in this country
want to be informed of their medical
situation, some do not.
In many cultures, the family wants to
be told the information, not the
patient.
Notes From The Edge
A true story about a 31 year old
physician diagnosed with a tumor in
his leg in 1992.
Think about how this man and his
family copes with the news of his
illness and what he goes through over
the course of treatment.
Peter’s response
Desire for a clear understanding of the illness,
prognosis & RX options
A temporal orientation to the future and desire
to maintain control into that future
Perception of freedom of choices
Willingness to discuss the prospect of death and
dying openly
Belief in human agency over fatalism that
minimizes the likelihood of divine intervention
An assumption that the individual rather than a
social group or family is the primary decision
maker.
Core Western Values
Autonomy vs. paternalism
Independence vs. dependence
Openness in discussion and truth
Individual decision-making over
family alone
Surveys of cancer patients (especially
younger ones) increasingly want to
know their dx and be involved in Rx
decisions
The SPIKES Model: Delivering Bad
News
The Setting
Perception
Invitation
Knowledge
Empathize
Summary
The Setting
Create an appropriate setting that
ensures:
Privacy
Patient comfort
Uninterrupted time
Sitting at eye level
Invite significant others if appropriate
Perception
Find out what the patient’s perception
is
Ask the patient “what have you been
told about what is going on?”, or,
“What is your understanding about
what is happening to you?”
Invitation
Ask if the patient would like you to
disclose what is happening
Ask how specific you should be:
“Are you the type of person who would
like a lot of details, numbers etc.?”
“Would you like me to share this with
you or with a family member as well?”
Knowledge
Giving information
Start at the patient’s level of
understanding using appropriate
language
Give information in small chunks and
check to see whether the content is
understood.
Do not overwhelm with too much
information
Empathize
Respond to the patient’s emotions
and reactions
Acknowledge all reactions and
feelings
Identify the emotion and validate and
support
Summary
Summarize the meeting
Ask if there are questions
Give a clear plan for next steps
The “Ask-Tell-Ask” Model
Ask the patient what he/she wants to
discuss
Ask the patient what he/she knows
already
Ask the patient what he/she would
like to know
Tell
Tell the patient what you would like to
discuss, for example:
“I suggest that we talk briefly about
what is going on and talk about
treatment options. You do not have to
make a decision today. You may want to
take some time to think about our
discussion.”
Recap the clinical situation
Find out if the patient knows his/her
diagnosis
Explore the patient’s current
understanding of the clinical situation
Just so we are on the same page, tell me
what you understand about what is
going on.
Outline medically reasonable
treatment options
Clearly provide the treatment options,
checking for understanding
Outline the pros and cons of each
Ask for the patient’s reaction
Reinforce accurate understanding
“I agree that option 1 would be the
roughest in terms of side effects..” or
“yes, the oral chemo is easier to take but
it does not shrink the cancer as often as
the IV chemo”.
When to give numerical information
Ask, “are you the kind of person who
likes to hear all the numbers?
Be careful of framing effects, for
example:
Saying, “the treatment has a 30%
chance of failure”, vs. “the treatment has
a 70% chance of success…”
Explain how the numbers pertain to your
individual patient
Prognosis
Offer to talk about prognosis if the
patient wants this information
“Some patients want to know about
prognosis, is this something you would like
to talk about?
“Well, we know that for patients who have
this kind of cancer, they have the chemo,
they live from months to a year, sometimes
longer.If they choose not to have the
chemo, they may live for a few weeks”
Your views
Ask patients if they want to hear your
recommendations.
If they say yes,
“Based on what I’ve heard from you so far, the
most important consideration for you is quality
of life and you’re concerned about the side
effects of the chemo, especially if it doesn’t
work. But you also want to be present at your
daughter’s graduation I 4 months. So I think for
you it would be worth giving the iv chemo a try,
knowing you could stop if the side effects are
too much…”
Negotiate a realistic time to make a
decision
Ask how much time the patient needs
to make a decision
Ask what other family members or
friends the patient may want to talk
with
Ask if any other information would be
helpful
Verify the patient has a realistic time
frame
Types of Care at the End of Life
Hospice Care
Hospice is not a “place”, it is a type of care
Multidisciplinary care
Primarily provided in homes, some hospitals
have hospice beds
Support for people at the end of life
Palliative care: symptom & pain
management
Focus on quality of life vs. prolongation of life
Advanced Directives
These should be ongoing discussions
Know your patient’s preferences
Health care proxy
How many of you have a living will?
How many of you have a health care
proxy?
Living will
DNR
Living Will
This outlines what you would like
done to you and for you in the event
you are not able to express your
wishes
Includes identification of treatment
wishes (DNR ; antibiotics;
extraordinary measures; hydration;
feeding)
Includes identification of a health care
proxy
Health Care Proxy
A person you identify to make
decisions for you regarding your
medical care in the even you are not
able to express your own wishes
Your “proxy” should be aware of what
you would want in these instances
Pitfalls
Trying to cover too much in one visit
Not responding to patient’s emotions
Assuming decision making can be
accomplished in one visit
Getting too technical and detailed
Forcing your view on your patient
Your Role
Reassure your patient you will not
abandon them
You will focus on what is important to
them
You will involve them in decisionmaking as much as they would like
You will be honest
Grief, Loss, Mourning &
Bereavement
Grief is a normal process
It is the emotional and psychological
reactions to a loss
Grief begins before the death for patient
and survivor) as one anticipates the loss
(can start at diagnosis)
Grief continues for the survivor and affects
one physically, psychologically, socially and
spiritually
Grief
No one “gets over” a loss
One learns to live with the loss
Grief is not always an orderly process
or predictable
Loss
The absence of a possession or future
possession.
Losses are experienced in daily life:
the break-up of a relationship;
children moving out; loss of a job
Loss includes loss of function due to
illness; loss of one’s role in a family
Most losses trigger mourning and
grief
Mourning
The social expression of grief
including rituals and practices
Often culturally and religiously
determined: may be very emotional
and verbal or show little reaction.
Influenced by one’s personality, life’s
experiences and previous losses
Bereavement
Includes grief and mourning
The inner feelings and outward
reactions of the survivor
Often refers to the time it takes for
the survivor to feel the pain of loss,
mourn, grieve and adjust to a world
without the presence of the deceased
Bereavement
Affects many systems in the body
Decrease in immunity during
bereavement
Changes in the immune system
produces increases in blood pressure;
increased anxiety; and leads to
increased risk of illness
The Grieving Process
There is a tremendous range of
“normal” responses
People take their own time to
integrate devastating news: there is
no one right way to grieve or mourn
Readjusting to life does not mean
“forgetting”
There is no such thing as “getting
over it”
What is Normal?
Grief tends to be experienced in waves
Over time the intensity and the frequency
of the waves decrease
Absence of intense distress early on does
not mean pathology will ensue; may be a
sign of resilience; may have a spiritual
belief that one is in a “higher” place
May feel distressed for longer than
proscribed notion of 1 year. Usually the
second year is more difficult – reality sets
in.
Tasks of Grief
To understand the person is dead.
Full acceptance of the loss
To feel the feelings: experience the
loss emotionally and cognitively. May
feel shock, denial, guilt, anger, fear,
sadness/sorrow and acceptance
To reintegrate or reinvest in life and
other relationships
The Work of Mourning
Mourning requires a lot of emotional
energy, leaving less energy for
normal activities
So much energy is tied to thinking
about the loss
One can only reinvest in new energy
after the old is discharged
Anticipatory Grief
Takes place before the death for the
patient and survivor
Can begin at time of diagnosis
The grief the patient undergoes to
prepare him/herself for death.
May provide time for preparation of
loss, acceptance, finish unfinished
business
Prepare for life without the loved one
Anticipatory Grief
Patients often ruminate about their
past
Review of one’s life
Withdraw from family and friends as
one prepares for final separation
Periods of sadness, crying and
anxiety
Sadness
vs.
Grief is experienced as
sadness
Sad, but able to smile
about memories of the
deceased, needs social
interactions
Mixture of good & bad
days
May feel guilt around
specific issues
May have thoughts of
“joining the deceased,
but not actively suicidal
Depression
Involves lack of selfworth
Loss of self-esteem
Worthlessness
Hopelessness
Overwhelming
generalized guilt
Suicidal thoughts
Flat affect that persists
Anhedonia
Both Grief and Depression
Sleep disturbances
Changes in eating
Crying
Anger
Anxiety / fear
Somatic features
Depression in Bereavement
Do not overlook depression in the bereaved
It often goes untreated because doctors
see symptoms as normal & understandable
in face of trauma.
The patient may be deprived of appropriate
treatment and suffer needlessly
Much higher incidence of depression in
widowed
Symptoms can persist for several years
Stages and Characteristics of
Normal Grief
Shock: protects the bereaved from
experiencing loss too quickly and
intensely
Feel numb / body shuts down
Feel stunned (can happen at diagnosis)
Much more profound if death is sudden
Some people feel something is wrong
with them if they don’t cry – at first it
doesn’t sink in
Normal Reactions in Grief
(See handouts for details)
Somatic symptoms
Emotional Reactions
Cognitive Reactions
Behavioral Reactions
Some Somatic Symptoms of Grief
Sighing
respirations
Lack of strength
Exhaustion; lack of
energy
Tightness in throat
Food tastes like
sand; dry mouth
Chest tightness:
Abdominal
emptiness
Insomnia
Loss of libido
Tremors / shakes
Vulnerable to
illness
Feeling dazed;
sense of unreality
Feel lost;
unorganized
Emotional Reactions
Relief
Emancipation
Sadness
Yearning
Anxiety
Loneliness;
emptiness
Despair
Ambivalence
Unable to feel
pleasure
Fear; anger
Shame
Cognitive Reactions
Disbelief state of
depersonalization
Confusion
Inability to concentrate
Idealization of the
deceased
Preoccupation with
thoughts or image of
the deceased
Dreams of the
deceased
Sense of presence
of deceased
Fleeting, tactile,
olfactory, visual
and auditory
hallucinatory
experiences
Search for meaning
Behavioral Reactions
Impaired ability to work
Crying
Withdrawal
Avoid reminders of deceased
Seeking or carrying reminders of
deceased
Over-reactivity
Changed relationships
Phase I
Need to tell story: compelling need to talk
about the details (makes it “real”; rework
trauma)
Decreased ability to make decisions or
impaired judgments
Increased risk of accidents
Vulnerable to getting sick
Survivors guilt or may feel somehow
responsible
Anger at deceased (for leaving); the
doctor; self
Phase II: Feeling the Feelings
Can appear weeks to months after Loss
Preoccupation with the deceased
Searching and yearning; intense wishing
Fully experience the sadness; crying; lonely
Insomnia / fatigue
Anhedonia; anorexia; or overeating
Physically enervated
Shift in mood: anger at others
People feel more “depressed” as reality sets
in
Increased anxiety as in PTSD
The Feelings
Hallucinations: visual, auditory and
olfactory (confined to the deceased);
talking to the deceased
The wish to see the person is so strong
Does not mean “crazy”
Visualize the deceased in their favorite
chair, on the street, hear their car…
More reported by women; experienced as
pleasurable
Physician: normalize these events for the
bereaved
Reorganization: Phase III
Adaptation; renewed interests (comes and
goes)
May be end of first, second, third year…
Ability to recall past with pleasure
New social contacts
Sense of release and renewed energy
without guilt
Ability to make better judgments
Return to more stable eating; sleeping
Crying spells less frequent
Complicated Grief: Danger
Signs
Persistent thoughts of self-destruction
Highest rate suicide: elderly widowed men
Failure to provide for basic needs: food;
fluids; regular range of motion exercise
Look for malnutrition in the widowed elderly
Persistent feelings of depression –
hopelessness, worthlessness
Abuse of alcohol or drugs
These are rarely used for the first time after a
loss
Recurrence of mental illness
Medications
Must carefully assess degree of depression
and need for medication
Do not overly medicate after a loss
People want to feel the full impact of the
loss
Do not overly medicate for a funeral –
survivors want to remember the event
Studies show use of benzodiazepines during
bereavement in short term decrease
anxiety and crying, but may inhibit normal
process
Types of Complicated Grief
Delayed: avoidance of reality; grief reactions
postponed
Chronic: normal reactions persist over long time
Exaggerated: self-destructive behaviors; overreactivity
Masked: unaware that behaviors that interfere
with fx are result of loss
Disenfranchised: When a loss is experienced and
cannot be openly acknowledged or publicly shared
HIV/AIDS; ex-partners or ex-spouse; friends;
lovers; mistresses; mother of a stillborn
Employers don’t recognize the loss
Complications
Alteration in relationships with friends
Furious hostility: bitterness; feeling
victimized
Development of somatic symptoms of
deceased
Self-punitive behavior/ agitated depression
Feel deserved to suffer or be punished
Obsessive thinking: what did I do to deserve
this?
Workaholic behavior
Factors that Influence Grief
Reactions
Timing of death in life
cycle: child vs. elderly
Nature of death:
sudden; suicide;
prolonged illness;
homicide; trauma;
natural disaster; war
Earlier unresolved
losses
Pre-morbid
functioning:
depression; substance
abuse
Relationship with
deceased: the better
the relationship – less
conflict in mourning
Support system
Spiritual solace
Characteristics After Sudden Death
Prominent depressive symptoms
Preservation of the deceased
Suicidal ideation
Anger at deceased
Gender Differences in Mourning
Women
Men
More intense reactions
Need to talk about the
loss, express feelings
and be recognized by
others;
Want emotional comfort
Rely on others for help
Difficulty with anger
Often are angry at men
because believe they are
being insensitive, when
grieving in their own way
Do not tend to talk
about the feelings as
much
Desire for faster return
to normalcy
Focus more on
practicalities; desire to
fix the problem
Dive into work routine
Focus on “managing
and controlling”
loneliness vs.
expressing sadness
Gender Tensions
Sex role conditioning may impede
healing, particularly for men
Men often reject support groups
Do not try to make men grieve like
women
Give permission to cry, express, not
rush to fix
Role of the Physician:
Prior to Death
Tell patient and family of impending death
Use factual and direct language
Let people know what to expect
Respect family rituals of mourning
Facilitate open discussion of advanced
directives
Encourage life review
Encourage family to complete unfinished
business; say goodbyes
Role of MD: After the Death
Inform bereaved what to expect
Give permission to grieve
Normalize grief reactions and individual
differences
Monitor reactions and medical status
Acknowledge one’s own feelings of loss,
failure, attachment
Request autopsy; organ donation
Respect mourning rituals; cultural
differences
Offer appropriate resources
After the Death
Advised the recently bereaved:
Do not make major life decisions too fast
Make sure to drink fluids
Warn of higher risk for accidents (e.g. driving)
Warn of higher risk for getting sick
Normalize hallucinations of deceased or other
reactions that may worry the bereaved
Do not put a time limit on grieving
Offer support and empathy
Warn bereaved of anniversary reactions
Therapeutic Interventions with the
Bereaved
Ask the patient to tell their story:
Describe circumstances of death
How did they learn of the death
What was the funeral like
Ask the patient to describe the deceased
Elicit the patient’s last words with deceased
Ask the pt what would he/she like to tell
the deceased now if were still alive
Ask about memories they would like to
share
Resources
Buckman, R. (1992) How to Break Bad
News: A Guide for Health Care
Professionals. Johns Hopkins University
Press: Baltimore.
Rando, TA. (1991) How to Go on Living
When Someone You Love Dies. Bantam
Books, New York.
Callanan, M., Kelley P. (1997) Final Gifts:
Understanding the Special Awareness,
Needs, and Communications of the Dying.
Bantam Books, New York.