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Table 1.
Family Needs and Family Opportunities
|
Principle Three: Palliative Care is an Interdisciplinary Team Approach and Process of CareCare for people who are dying is optimally practiced as a team process and as a coordinated whole. Each member of the interdisciplinary clinical team represents a valuable resource during the procedure of devising and implementing a patient/family centered plan of care. Members of the team contribute through specific roles. The nurse case manager is the pivotal person coordinating care and serving as a conduit of information between members of the team and with the patient and family. The nurse regularly assesses physical and functional status, administers treatments, identifies new or impending problems and drafts a plan of care. The patient’s physician or the palliative care physician has responsibility for performing a medical evaluation, prescribing medications and symptom-alleviating treatments, and ensuring that an ethically sound process of decision making and informed consent has preceded significant treatment decisions. The social worker undertakes the financial and psychosocial evaluation and accesses sources of support for the patient and family. The chaplain explores spiritual or existential questions the patient might have, provides pastoral support, and helps the patient connect with his or her own local faith community and resources. Yet a reductionist approach to explaining a clinical palliative care team misses the essence of the model. In practice, the whole is more than the sum of its parts. Synergy is consciously recruited in the work of the team.[48],[49] Interdisciplinary care planning is the central dynamic – a genuinely creative process that invites input from all members of the clinical team. Thus the social worker or bath aide can lend their eyes and ears in gauging the impact that pain is having on the patient’s activities and functional status. The nurse or physician may respond to a fearful patient’s question about the future in a way that leads to a therapeutically valuable discussion of meaning and spiritual connection. In addition to providing respite to a patient’s spouse, a volunteer may help the patient label pictures for an album or record spoken stories aiding the person in developing a sense of completion, or assist in spiritual care by transporting and sitting with the patient for an hour in a cathedral or at the ocean or a riverside.
Principle Four: Dying is a Part of LivingThe most fundamental feature of palliative care is a recognition of dying as a part of living – an important part.[50],[51] Dying is characteristically hard, unwanted and often tragic. Nevertheless, dying is a natural and normal human experience. While the symptoms and physical needs of dying persons require expert medical attention, dying is more than a set of medical problems to be solved. The fundamental nature of dying is as a personal experience. Viewed from the perspective of the life of the individual, even the multitude of medical problems is often dwarfed by the enormity of this final transition. The philosophical stance of approaching dying as fundamentally personal and experiential distinguishes palliative care from even the most comprehensive problem-based medical care of people who are dying. The goal of improving quality of life and personal experience is a guiding principle in the design of each patient’s palliative plan of care and is reflected in the subsequent interventions by members of the clinical team. Whether patients are at home, in a nursing home or in an acute care hospital, medical testing and treatment should be as unobtrusive as possible, arranged whenever possible to accommodate the patient’s and family’s schedule and the sanctity of their time. The patient’s and family’s priorities dictate the priorities for the plan of care. Family visits, attendance at important family celebrations, such as weddings, graduations and reunions, and participation in religious and cultural rituals often become important objectives for patients and, therefore, important objectives within a plan of care. Medical services may creatively utilize sophisticated home-based services and novel routes of medication administration in support of these goals. Psychosocial and spiritual support can focus on personal preparation and achieving comfort and a sense of completion and closure. Principle Five: Palliative Care Represents Intensive CareIt is axiomatic that dying patients are among the very sickest in the health care system. While palliative care is often spoken of in terms of “supportive care,” many patients seen by hospice and palliative care programs have multi-system failure and require many hours a week of skilled care and many more hours of supportive care. They may be taking 10 or more medications on any given day. Clearly in meeting the needs of the patients and families, palliative care often represents intensive care. It is a mistake to assume that hospice and palliative care must avoid sophisticated or expensive diagnostic workups and treatments. Issues of the cost or the “aggressive” nature of a proposed intervention do not obviate consideration of therapies of curative intention and must not limit consideration of treatments to relieve a patient’s distress or improve quality of life in advanced illness. The intensive nature of some palliative interventions – such as neurolytic blocks for unrelenting neuropathic pain or sedation for management of severe terminal agitation – is properly limited only by patient-imposed restrictions. Intervention StrategiesAn important monograph from the Standards and Accreditation Committee of the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization outlines a “treat, prevent, promote” intervention strategy.[52] It represents a systematic approach to comprehensive care planning throughout the terminal phase of illness. The Pathway assessment and intervention schema focuses on opportunities for clinical action. Consistent with the principles presented in this chapter, the Pathway assumes that the most pressing priority for patients and families is treatment of immediate sources of suffering – physical, emotional, social or spiritual. The team then focuses on preventing symptoms and complications for which the patient is known to be at risk, and on early signs or foreseeable family conflicts or inter-personal discord. The interdisciplinary team plan of care also attends to promoting opportunities for a patient and family to grow, individually and together, through this final stage of life.[53],[54],[55] When patients and families are supported at these levels, it is more likely that they will perceive that life retains value and offers treasured moments even as they face physical decline.[56]
Developmental Landmarks and TaskworkIn approaching the apparent paradox of ‘healing versus curing,’ it is worth emphasizing a fundamental tenet: Dying is a part of living. The period of time referred to as dying is a stage in the life of the individual and the family. Modern psychological theorists, among them Erik Erickson, Jean Piaget and Abraham Maslow, have recognized that human development is a life-long process. Clinical experience in palliative care reveals that the end of life can be a time of remarkable opportunity and a time of profound richness and depth for the patients and families[57],[58],[59],[60],[61],[62],[63],[64] The magnitude of the personal growth nurses witness is often surprising to both the patient and family. Furthermore, experienced nurses recognize that these developmental opportunities not only can be preserved, they can also be nurtured. People can be helped to identify the things that matter most to them now during this concluding phase of their life. Are there important things that they feel a need to say to another? Are there things that would be left undone if they were to die suddenly? Palliative care is practiced one patient and one family at a time. Through the skillful, effective management of symptoms, opportunity is preserved and through skillful, sensitive counseling, growth can be facilitated. The specific characteristics of personal experience with advanced illness, dying and grieving vary widely from person to person. The particular work that a person has need for, or interest in, doing as they confront life’s end will vary. However, a person’s individuality is not diminished by recognition of elemental commonalities within the human condition as life ends. Issues of life completion and life closure are available to each individual. One need not await serious, life-limiting illness for these issues to have relevance, but knowledge that time is limited lends urgency to these matters. The developmental landmarks and examples of end-of-life task work outlined here represent predictable personal challenges as well as important opportunities of persons as they die. Importantly, within a developmental model one need not sanitize nor glorify the experience of life's end to think of a person as having died well or, similarly, as having achieved a degree of wellness in their dying. Personal development is rarely easy. The touchstone of “dying well” is that the experience is of value and meaningful for the person and their family.[65],[66] (Table 2) |
Table 2.
Byock’s Working Set of
Landmarks and Developmental Taskwork
|
|
LANDMARKS |
|
|
Sense of completion with worldly affairs |
Transfer of fiscal, legal and formal social responsibilities |
|
Sense of completion in relationships with community |
Closure of multiple social relationships (employment, commerce,
organizational, congregational) |
|
Sense of meaning about ones' individual life |
Life review |
|
Experienced love of self |
Self-acknowledgment |
|
Experienced love of others |
Acceptance of worthiness |
|
Sense of completion in relationships with family and friends |
Reconciliation, fullness of communication and closure in each of one's
important relationships. |
|
Acceptance of the finality of life – of one's existence as an individual |
Acknowledgment of the totality of personal loss represented by one's
dying and experience of personal pain of existential loss |
|
Sense of a new self (personhood) beyond personal loss |
Developing self-awareness in the present |
|
Sense of meaning about life in general |
Achieving a sense of awe |
|
Surrender to the transcendent, to the unknown - "letting go" |
In pursuit of this landmark, the doer and "taskwork" are one. Here, little remains of the ego except the volition to surrender. |
Table 2. Adapted from I. Byock. "The Nature of Suffering and the Nature of Opportunity at the End of Life." Clinical Geriatrics Medicine 12, no. 2 (1996): 237-52.
Empiric support for this developmental model is provided by a study conducted by Steinhauser and colleagues involving focus groups comprised of patients with advanced illness and their families. Qualitative content analysis of transcripts revealed that people assign importance to domains of preparation for death, a sense of completion, and feeling that they are or have contributed to others.[67] In a detailed ethnographic, participant-observer study of nine terminally ill individuals and their primary caregivers, Staton, Shy and Byock demonstrated the relevance of this construct and of these developmental landmarks in the lives of people who are aware that they have only a few months to live.[68]
Saying the Five ThingsThe impending loss of relationships is emotionally painful for almost every person who is aware that death is near. Predictably, achieving a sense of completion in significant relationships is an important opportunity for ill persons and those who love them. The simple of exercise of saying “The Five Things” – “Forgive me. I forgive you. Thank you. I love you. Goodbye.” – has helped many people develop a sense of having left nothing important unsaid. Relationships that become “complete” in this manner need not end. In acknowledging the inevitable loss that approaches, continued time together with friends and relatives often reflects a poignant, loving, solemn and yet celebratory quality. Sometimes relatively simple interventions can have profound clinical effect. The practice of eliciting stories can stimulate a process of life review that contributes to a patient’s sense of meaning of their life. The clinician, family member or trained volunteer who assists in the process can focus on highlights and major transitions in the person’s life. Life review is not insight therapy and need not dwell on a person’s history of loss and grief. Indeed, Kast recommends assisting patients in constructing “biographies of joy” as a way of balancing the grief that people facing the end of life often feel.[69] Stories also can be a gift that the ill person gives to others. People living with debilitating effects of illness may struggle with feelings of unworthiness and a sense of being a burden to others. The recording of family stories involving the marriage of matriarch and patriarch, seminal events, and the history of the family during war or natural disasters is a tangible way that people can contribute to their children, grandchildren and the generations to come. The Professional CaregiverThe Therapeutic Stance of the ClinicianTraining and experience are always valuable and while clinical competence is essential, also fundamental to providing superior care at the end of life is a therapeutic stance of the clinician from which team involvement and direct clinical interaction occur. Critical attributes of this caring orientation and attitude include the following: ReliabilityPatients who are dying are in an inherently chaotic period of time and process. Health care providers must make preparations for predicable problems, but also develop contingency plans for the unpredictable problems that will arise. Doing so requires a systems approach. There must be enough resources and skillful, experienced personnel in the health care system to handle any emergency or contingency. Achieving this end requires broad and on-going education not only to staff and colleagues working on hospital floors or specialty units, nor only to hospice and palliative care staff, but also to the staff of area nursing homes, and the community’s emergency medical services providers. Education and system planning should reflect the interdisciplinary and collaborative nature of the care that is desired. HonestyTruth telling is a fundamental principle of clinical bio-ethics – and it is certainly applicable to palliative and end-of-life care. Patients have a clear right to be offered information about their condition and the treatment options available. Withholding bad news in an attempt to shield an ill person from the truth is virtually always a mistake and frequently arises from a misguided desire to protect the holders of the information, whether they are family members or professionals. Secrets tend to isolate people at the very time when closeness is most needed.[70] In some cultures it is taboo or otherwise unacceptable to talk openly about dying with the ill person. Often the patient can be asked if he or she would like to discuss and make medical decisions. If not, the patient can indicate with whom clinicians can discuss care and who can make these decisions on his or her behalf. Non-attachmentNon-attachment is a component of the therapeutic stance that refers, firstly, to outcomes. While clinicians’ commitment to alleviating suffering and enhancing the quality of life cannot be stressed too strongly, despite the very best of palliative care, sometimes, bad things happen. The world in which patients live, and therefore die, is imperfect. By contributing to reliability in their local health system and by ensuring that competent, caring attention is consistently provided, nurses model social responsibility one person to another. Professionals who choose to care for people who are dying do not deserve and must not accept guilt – including self-imposed guilt – when a patient or family’s suffering persists despite concerted, good faith efforts to prevent and treat distress. Non-attachment also refers to maintaining a non-judgmental attitude toward our patients regarding their emotions and reactions. Even the most sensitive care during this trying time of life may provoke displaced anger toward professional caregivers. Alternately, expressions of love and devotion toward caregivers may be out of proportion to services rendered. The challenge for professionals is to absorb these emotions – somewhat like a sponge – while not reacting in overly personal ways to either. AuthenticityIn contemporary, colloquial shorthand, authenticity is referred to as being real. It refers to openness and emotional availability on the part of a clinician. This aspect of the therapeutic stance initially may seem antithetical to the quality of non-attachment. It is not. Instead, the willingness and ability to act with caring intention, while acknowledging the tension between the temptation to emotionally detach and flee on the one hand and the seductive draw of emotional involvement on the other, imbues a professional’s practice with authenticity. The commitment and readiness to act out of genuine caring despite an acknowledged lack of complete clinical or philosophical clarity also contributes to the authentic quality of the clinician-patient relationship. At its best, authenticity refers to a willingness to engage the patient in a personal, non-objectified manner. It is a willingness to extend friendship while maintaining professional standards of human interaction. This invites true compassion – which from its roots means not simply sympathy or kindness but a willingness to suffer with the other. To see the dying patient as a person to be met in friendship, shoulder to shoulder on a journey neither would choose, invites this meaning of compassion. Additionally, authenticity implies willingness and the courage to say difficult things to patients when necessary – this may include an ability to set limits on inappropriate behaviors or demands. It may also extend to the clinician sharing with the patient his or her own feelings of frustration, disappointment and sadness. Authenticity is not merely an attribute that is valuable to the recipients of care. Within this personal investment lie the rewards for care providers. Clinicians who make home visits to hospice patients and their families have been known to remark on an ambience that often surrounds anticipated home deaths that is wonderful. It is notable how frequently the word “sacred” is used to describe these poignant scenes – even though the experience is stressful and always exhausting for the family. When friends and relatives gather to support one another in anticipation of their loved one’s death, there is often a sense of solemnity; but sometimes, there is also a sense of celebration, accompanied by tears as well as interspersed moments of laughter. Participation in such experiences is an earned privilege of the caring professions. The clinician’s commitment to service of others – investment in training and willingness to be present at difficult times – carries with it the opportunity to share in these most meaningful and intimate experiences in the lives of the person and family they serve. ImaginationImagination is an essential element of the therapeutic relationship. One person cannot really know the intimate experience of another. Indeed, the assertion, “I know what you’re going through,” can sound callous. However, if the clinician has taken the time and invested the emotional energy to actually do so, the statement, “I can only imagine how difficult this must be for you,” can communicate genuine empathy. This process involves what may be termed the receptive imagination. From within this stance the clinician listens to the patient’s story as if he or she were the speaker and looks at the world as if through the patient’s eyes. The clinician can also draw upon the creative capacity of his or her generative imagination in helping a patient or family envision a satisfactory sense of completion and closure.[71] When working with a person who acknowledges that their life is limited, and after being confident of a therapeutic alliance, a clinician may invite a patient to look at the events of his or her illness as the middle portion of a poignant biographical novel. The person’s imagination can be enlisted to address several questions: “What would be left undone if the hero/heroine of the story died suddenly, today?” More provocative still, given what is known of the main character’s history, values and current terminally ill condition, “What would success look like, even now?” or “How might the story end in a way that was meaningful and valuable in the hero’s or heroine’s own terms?”
This use of generative imagination also
gives rise to hope. Within the medical model, when there is no longer any
realistic expectation of cure, hope is often spoken of as an expectation
of comfort. This is tantamount to saying that all people who are living
with a terminal illness can hope for is to avoid suffering. If human
potential does exist at the end of life, our concept of hope can and must
expand. The dictionary definition of hope specifies, “a desire for
some good, accompanied with at least a slight expectation of obtaining it,
or a belief that it is obtainable.”[72] By sharing with the patient the knowledge that
growth, at times, does occur in the context of terminal illness – that it
is possible, and that the person can be supported in this process – the
person is invited to have hope. He or she is presented with a goal that is
both valuable and achievable. ConclusionDying is more than a set of medical problems to be solved. Dying is fundamentally a profound personal experience for the person and family. Nurses in oncology have essential roles to play in ensuring comfort and enhancing the quality of life for the dying person and the family. Pain and other sources of physical distress associated with far-advanced disease can be controlled. Even suffering that arises from deeply personal and spiritual or existential sources is clinically approachable. The first step is to acknowledge the person’s suffering by listening in a skillful manner.
Simply by doing what nurses do best – caring
for the persons who are our patients – and by providing care without
embarrassment about the inevitability of death, by caring within a team of
committed providers, by keeping one’s own commitment and that of the team
strong, by preparation and education, and by acknowledging the lifelong
human capacity for human development that exists within each dying person
and his or her family, nurses can contribute to a healthy
re-incorporation of the value of dying within the ongoing mystery of life References1. E. J. Cassell, "The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine," New England Journal of Medicine 306, no. 11 (1982). 2. I. Byock and M. P. Merriman. "Measuring Quality of Life for Patients with Terminal Illness: The Missoula-Vitas Quality of Life Index." Palliative Medicine 12 (1998): 231-44.[Byock, 1998 #46] |