Skip to main content

Palliative Care: Adding life to days

While Medical science has significantly increased our life expectancy and made many diseases treatable, it has made our expectations soar to unreasonabe heights and dimished our capacity to accept death due to diseases that defy current treatment. Widespread cancer, dementia and advanced chronic diseases of the heart, lungs or liver are some examples that cause significant pain and suffering, progress relentlessly and render even the relatives helpless and frustrated.
Palliative Medicine (PM) may sound a paradox in modern times, as “it aims to add life or quality to the remaining days, in terminally ill patients”, says Dr Mhoira Leng, a British doctor presently working in Uganda, and a pioneer in this subspeciality, who was in Lucknow recently. “Providing relief of the  distressing and dehumanising pain to patients with terminal cancer can be one of the greatest boons of medical science that is unfortunately not often adequately utilized”, she added.
Experts in PM have to tackle several problems and at various stages. Their work often starts with breaking the bad news and counseling such patients and relatives, who are often in a state of denial or unrealistic expectation. Relatives of most cancer patients in India do not wish the diagnosis to be disclosed to the patient. As the disease progresses and hospital visits get more frequent, the patient usually starts suspecting the diagnosis, but finds himself surrounded by bluffing relatives, with whom he can no longer discuss with frankness his problems, preferences and last wishes. He often feels lonely and emotionally isolated in his last days.
At stake is the “care” that such patients receive. To most relatives (read well earning sons often staying elsewhere), it means taking the ailing parent from one hospital to another, often to another city, putting him through a battery of expensive re-tests, and hooking him on to machines in ICU setups, and keeping him ignorant of his diagnosis and fate. While all this provide some satisfaction to the relatives that they have done all that they possibly could, and mitigates their sense of guilt, it often adds to the patients misery, pain and suffering. Studies have shown that what he needs most is his own bed, his familiar home, loving relatives, and palliation of hid distressing symptoms that make his last phase of life so agonizing.
Relief of pain is crucial to caring for such patients. A recent study has shown that specialists in tertiary care hospitals are often more obsessed with performing one test after another, and paying much less importance to relieving pain. The recently started Pain Clinic and the Palliative Medicine services at SGPGI hope to change that. After assessing the severity of pain, therapy is tailored to the patient’s requirement. Apart from providing relief to the distressed patient and making him comfortable, it often sooths the nerves of bewildered relatives. The major challenge is to take such therapy to the patient’s bedside at home.
Jade Goody, the British TV star, died recently of advanced cervical cancer. Rather than in an alien atmosphere of a hospital surrounded by machines, she lived her last days with dignity at home, and that is where she preferred to die. 
As Published in HT City ( Hindustan Times)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Food Fads in Liver Disorders

In an attempt at trying to do well to those they love, spouses and parents often enforce diets on patients of liver diseases that often turn out to be detrimental. The commonest food fad is pale insipid boiled cabbage being doled out to nauseous patients suffering from hepatitis that makes them puke even more.  The liver, in a way, is a buzzing manufacturing unit that requires lots of energy to keep its multiple functions going. And it derives all this from the food we eat. During disease, such as during an attack of jaundice, when many of the liver cells get killed, the liver attemptsdamage control by trying to regenerate quickly. For its cells to multiply however, it requires a generous supply of energy that comes from carbohydrates, and protein, the building block for its cells and tissues. Boiled green vegetables unfortunately have neither of these. Hence the situation often progresses to that of a starved liver unable to recuperate due to cut-off food supply.

Bad Dreams, Disturbed Sleep

  A good night’s sleep, so essential to rest your body and mind, and restore ‘energy” and vitality, is becoming a casualty for many these days. Last week a 58 year old lady complained that she woke up with a startle in the middle of the night dreaming of “drugs”, something she had never been exposed to all her life. Another reported a nightmare in which he felt someone was “strangulating” him by tightening something around his neck, till he woke up feeling choked! Yet another reported dreaming that he was in an ICU of a hospital with PPE draped figures surrounding his bed while he was being prepared to be hooked to a ventilator. Bad dreams can be disturbing to say the least. One wakes up with a startle or in sweat, feeling disturbed and uneasy, and feeling drained. The mood in the morning is usually uneasy and snappy. Creative thinking has usually gone for a toss…postponed to yet another day when one feels more cheerful and positive.   Several factors could be contributing to “

The Doctor’s Dress

The familiar white coat worn by physicians as their distinctive dress for over 100 years, has started generating  murmurs  of controversy. It is not uncommon to find the blood pressure to be higher when measured by a white-coat-wearing-doctor in the hospital or clinic than the readings obtained at home by relatives.  This is due to the anxiety that the white coat and the hospital setting evokes in patients, and has been termed “White Coat Hypertension”. Mature clinicians often routinely subtract a few points from these measurements when entering records in case charts or calculating the dose of anti-hypertensive medications to be prescribed. The white coat scares children too.  Kids often express their dislike for this dress by crying and screaming and by denying access to their bellies or chest for examination by paediatricians in this attire. Many pediatricians across the world have folded up their white coats and taken to informal colourful dressing to get closer to thei