Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
of fat and tissue, making painful humps beneath the skin. The
humps—technically known as inguinal hernias—were easily fix-
able with the latest laparoscopic surgery, to be performed under
general anesthesia. Dr. Fales recommended a truss to temporar-
ily ease the pain, but my mother balked because its two-hun-
dred-dollar cost was not covered by Medicare. Time was of the
essence: without a surgical fix or at least a truss, a loop of small
intestine might get pinched or “incarcerated” in the wall of my
father’s abdomen, lose its blood supply, and develop gangrene. In
my ignorance, I figured that a hernia repair was too minor to war-
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 55
1/31/13 12:27 PM
56
katy butler
rant my dropping work and making a trip east. Only later would I
understand that there is no such thing as minor surgery—or any
minor procedure for that matter—for the very old and frail.
Dr. Fales referred my father to a local general surgeon, who
sent him to a cardiologist for a preoperative clearance. On the
day after Christmas, a little more than a year after the stroke,
my mother drove my father down to the Connecticut shore for
an urgent appointment with Dr. Rogan of Middlesex Cardiology
Associates. Dr. Rogan was fifty-two, a mild-mannered man with
dark hair and a receding hairline, a graduate of the University
of Massachusetts Medical School, and a Catholic. His clinical
notes would describe my father as “a pleasant South African
gentleman” who “fought for the British in WWII and lost his
left arm to a mortar blast in the Italian campaign.” Years later he
would write me a letter describing how much he’d liked him.
Dr. Rogan saw nothing unusual in my father’s clinical case.
He ran an electrocardiogram and discovered that at rest, my
father’s aging heart beat only thirty-five times a minute—a little
more than half the rate of most healthy young people. Techni-
cally known as “asymptomatic bradycardia,” my Dad had had
the condition for at least six years. It is common among the very
athletic and the very old. Many Olympic endurance athletes
have slow resting heart rates because their large, efficient hearts
pump large volumes of oxygen-saturated blood to their muscles
during contests and then slow down radically when at rest.
My father’s heart was slow because he was eighty.
His heart’s natural pacemaker, a comma-shaped bundle of
nerve fibers called the sinoatrial node, had, in the process of
normal aging, lost much of its firing power. Perched near the
top of the upper-right chamber of the heart, the sinoatrial node
is about the size of a pencil eraser. Day and night, from birth
to death, it spontaneously fires a tiny electrical charge, pauses,
gathers itself, and fires again. The signal pulses down through
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 56
1/31/13 12:27 PM
knocking on heaven’s door
57
heart muscle and nerve fibers to the ventricles, the twin major
lower pumping chambers, cueing them to squeeze blood out
into the arteries for transport to all the limbs and vital organs.
By the age of seventy-five, the sinoatrial node has often lost as
much as 90 percent of its cells through a natural process of
aging and cell die-off. Nerve cells elsewhere in the heart’s elec-
trical conduction system have thinned out as well.
My father’s slow heartbeat had first revealed itself in 1994,
during a routine electrocardiogram at his internist’s office. Some-
times the signals pulsing from his sinoatrial node took a few
extra seconds to reach the lower chambers. Sometimes his heart
paused between beats. Once in a while it missed beats altogether,
a pattern cardiologists call a Wenckebach rhythm. But despite
the wrong sort of squiggle on the electrocardiogram—a pattern
that Dr. Rogan called “first degree heart block” and “Sick Sinus
Syndrome”—my dad had never fainted or gotten dizzy or showed
any other sign of heart trouble, aside from an occasional puffy
ankle. If he’d grown old before the pacemaker was invented,
nobody would have called his heart diseased—just worn out.
Dr. Rogan looked at the tests and decided that my father
needed a pacemaker. Without a “pacer,” he said, my father’s
heart might stop under the stress of general anesthesia dur-
ing the hernia surgery. A sense of urgency, combined with the
assumption that the treatment offered has no alternatives and
no downsides, are common ingredients in medical decisions,
later regretted, involving the fragile elderly. It was the second
time that Dr. Rogan had seen my father, and the second time
he’d recommended a pacemaker.
Dr. Rogan had first examined my father a year earlier, in Novem-
ber of 2001, just weeks before the first stroke, after my father’s
gastroenterologist became alarmed by my Dad’s slow heartbeat.
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 57
1/31/13 12:27 PM
58
katy butler
Dr. Rogan had told my Dad then that he “did qualify for a pace-
maker,” even though cardiology treatment guidelines did not
actually recommend one for asymptomatic bradycardia. In a
later letter to me, Dr. Rogan would call my father’s case then “a
grey zone to be sure, and not fitting neatly into the guidelines.
I felt he should consider a pacer before any major symptom,
thinking it inevitable he would need one.”
My then-vigorous and intact father told Dr. Rogan that he
wasn’t interested unless a pacemaker was absolutely neces-
sary—and nor was his internist, Dr. Fales, who considered it
overtreatment. Dr. Rogan made plans nevertheless to hook my
father up to a portable Holter cardiac monitor, a portable strap-
on electrocardiograph that can record the heart rhythm twenty-
four hours a day. The longer test period might have uncovered
further rhythmic oddities and strengthened the case for a device.
But before the Holter test could take place, my mother had
called Dr. Rogan’s office in tears to say my father had had his
first stroke.
At about the same time that Dr. Rogan first broached the idea
of a pacemaker, a cardiologist in Italy named Alberto Dolara was
promoting a new clinical approach he called “Slow Medicine.”
Fast medicine, like fast food, he wrote in an internationally
influential essay published in a leading Italian cardiology jour-
nal in early 2002, often involved a barrage of rapidly prescribed
tests and treatments—fixing rather than healing. Slow medi-
cine, like slow food, valued restraint, calm, and above all, time:
time to weigh the emotional and physical costs of medical treat-
ment; time to evaluate new methods and technologies; time, as
the end of life approached, to stop frenetic doing and to take
care instead of the broader needs of patients and their families.
Excessive eagerness to act, Dolara wrote later in English in
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 58
1/31/13 12:27 PM
knocking on heaven’s door
59
Acta Cardiologica,
can result in “premature timing in surgery, too much enthusiasm for new technologies, exaggerated emphasis
on tests . . . and scarce attention to the needs of patients.” “To
do more,” wrote one of his Slow Medicine colleagues, Fran-
cesco Fiorista, elsewhere, “is not necessarily to do better.”
The Italian doctors were part of a quietly emerging medi-
cal counterculture drawing mainly from such money-starved
and unglamorous domains as geriatrics, palliative care, internal
and family medicine, and hospice care. If the movement had a
birth date, it was probably 1967, when an English nurse named
Cicely Saunders opened the first modern hospice, St. Chris-
topher’s, in London, with the goal of treating a patient’s “total
suffering” rather than trying to extend life. In many ways, Slow
Medicine represented not an advance, but a return to ancient
ways of doctoring
Even though the Slow Medicine movement—which broadly
speaking emphasizes patient-centered care, unrushed medical
decisions and “care over “cure”—was quietly mushrooming, its
philosophy was easy to ignore amid the clangor of better-funded,
high-tech medicine, with its dramatic fixes and sometimes
exaggerated hopes. The Italian doctors were in the minority—
especially among cardiologists—but they were not outliers, and
nor was my medically cautious father. Some studies suggest
that patients are more likely than their doctors to reject major
elective surgery when fully informed of pros, cons, and alterna-
tives—information that nearly half of patients say they don’t get.
And although Dr. Rogan assumed that it was an unbridled good
thing to extend my father’s life, nearly a third of the severely ill
and dependent don’t feel that way. In a 1997 study in
The Jour-
nal of the American Geriatrics Society,
30 percent of seriously ill people surveyed in a hospital said they would “rather die” than
live permanently in a nursing home—a preference that neither
their doctors nor their close relatives were much good at pre-
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 59
1/31/13 12:27 PM
60
katy butler
dicting. In another study, 28 percent of people with congestive
heart failure said they’d trade a single day of life in excellent
health for two years of survival in their current condition.
When my parents met with Dr. Rogan in late 2002, with my father
now stroke-damaged and in pain from his hernias, they had unwit-
tingly arrived at an unmarked crossroads where even the most
seemingly routine medical decisions become fraught and sacred.
Assumptions that went unquestioned when my Dad was whole
and vigorous—when “saving his life” meant more than exchanging
one pathway to death for another—were starting to shift. The deci-
sion that day was not simply
how
or
when
to treat, but
whether.
My parents were contemplating more than a pacemaker. They were
contemplating how much suffering they would bear in exchange
for more time together on earth. And they did not know it.
At this crossroads, each miraculous life-extending technol-
ogy pulls up from the depths a tangle of our most deeply held
and unarticulated moral questions and puts them under a halo-
gen light. How grateful are we for the gift of life and what are
we willing to undergo for more of it? Would we rather die too
soon or too late? How do we make sense of the loss of human
bonds that death brings even to those who believe in heaven?
Does a caregiver’s suffering have moral standing? Can a daugh-
ter express her love for her father by doing all she can to let him
die, or is that an expression of her selfishness and buried hate?
What would my father have said that day at Dr. Rogan’s
office if the pacemaker had been discussed as a choice-point
rather than a necessity? What if Dr. Rogan had told him that its
battery would last ten years? What would my mother have said
if the doctor had asked her how she was coping with caregiving
or asked my father whether he felt his life was still worth living?
I do not know. Dr. Rogan was a specialist in heart rhythm,
KnockingHeaven_ARC.indd 60
1/31/13 12:27 PM
knocking on heaven’s door
61
not in geriatrics, psychiatry, or family medicine. He told me later
that he did not take gifts from medical sales representatives, he
clearly cared about his patients, and his approach to my father’s
case conformed to accepted medical practice. He was simply
tightly focused on one fixable piece of my father’s problems. If
he hadn’t suggested the pacemaker and something had gone
wrong, our family could even have sued him for negligence for
failing to meet the “standard of care” in our local community.
He was presented with a wife—my mother—who knew how
to keep up appearances. My father could not easily follow an
animated dinner-table conversation then, much less talk with
a near-stranger about how he wanted to die, or live. And in my
parents’ eyes, I was just a daughter with problems of her own on
a faraway coast: struggling to earn a living, growing warily closer
to a new man, and negotiating a sometimes fraught relationship
with his two nearly grown sons, who were accustomed to having
the run of their father’s house.
My mother was not a compliant or stupid woman. She wasn’t
enthusiastic about the pacemaker and she knew that their inter-
nist, the trusted Dr. Fales, opposed it. But she was anxious to get
my father out of pain and was no expert on high-tech medicine.
In the course of her long life, she’d usually believed what doctors
told her, and on the whole it had worked out well. She grew up
in times when almost all doctors practiced what the Italians had
taken to calling Slow Medicine: they made house calls, earned
incomes roughly equal to those of their patients, served the same
families for decades, didn’t get gifts from drug and device sales-
men, and didn’t prescribe technologies they indirectly profited