Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
or lower abdomen. . . . There’s nothing natural about the way
they die, as the image of dried leaves falling in late autumn
would impart. This tells us that our medical facilities leave us
no room to think of death.
The dying patient is surrounded by medical staff who,
with its life support systems, has only one thought in mind: to
extend life as long as possible. Next is the family and relatives
who think there’s nothing more important than life. For the
patients confronting death, they wait alone inside that cold
equipment on a stage prepared to struggle against death. But
even if they wanted to prepare themselves for death, there’s no
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one to give them advice, and in that state they die. Even if
they wanted to talk it over with someone, there only returns
the litany of “Gambatte!” (“Hang in there!”).
Not all doctors and nurses were pleased with the changes,
and few other developed countries embraced medical technol-
ogy with quite the gusto of the United States. Fewer ICUs—and
far fewer dialysis units, for that matter—were established in my
old home country, Britain, where funding decisions were made
by regional administrators for the money-pinched and budget-
conscious National Health Service. They faced other claims on
their resources, such as paying the salaries of doctors to provide
good, universal, free primary care, and even employing geriatric
psychiatrists who, as late as the 1990s, made house calls. The
British medical system now costs about half as much as does
the United States’s, but its citizens have better overall health.
A decade after the first intensive care and coronary care units
were established in England, a study in the
Lancet
found that
the new units—whose beeping electronic machines terrified
some patients—conferred “no clear advantage” over home care
for heart attack victims. Another study, published in the
British
Medical Journal,
found in 1976 that patients over sixty and those suffering a first, uncomplicated heart attack did slightly better
at home. Today, about 2 percent of beds in British hospitals are
intensive care beds; in the United States, the figure is more than
11 percent. As a consequence of their relative scarcity, intensive
care beds in Britain are less often the dying-place of the elderly.
In 1968, a decade after Arne Larsson’s first pacemaker and
sixteen years after Zoll saved R.A.’s life with the Physiological
Stimulator, a pathologist named William St. Clair Symmers at
Charing Cross Hospital in London described a troubling case,
a harbinger of thousands to come. Lifesaving machines were
evolving so rapidly and scrambling moral and medical categories
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in such confusing ways that the soft technologies of clinical
practice and common sense could not keep up. The unspoken
maxim had become, “If we can, we must.”
In a letter to the
British Medical Journal
entitled “Not Allowed to Die,” Dr. Symmers described a retired sixty-eight-year-old doctor who’d been admitted to “an overseas hospital” (most likely in
the United States) with a stomach cancer that had fatally metas-
tasized to his lymph, liver, and spine. After one surgery to remove
much of his stomach and another to clear a blood clot from his
lung, the dying doctor-patient asked that “no steps should be
taken to prolong his life, for the pain of his cancer was now more
than he would needlessly continue to endure. He himself wrote
a note to this effect in his case records.”
Two weeks later the desperately ill doctor had a heart attack
while still in the hospital. Five times in a single night his heart
stopped, and five times the emergency resuscitation team
rushed to his bedside and restarted it. Morning found the man
in one of the ambiguous, halfway states being created so fre-
quently by life-support machines that new medical terms—like
persistent vegetative state
and
brain death
—were being invented to describe them.
Resuscitation had kept alive his brain stem—the most primi-
tive, reptilian part of the central nervous system—and it kept
signaling his heart to beat and his lungs to rise and fall. But the
folded rind of his neocortex, the advanced, thinking portions
of his brain, was dead from lack of oxygen. Gone was what we
commonly call the “self,” the personality, or even the soul. The
man’s body was still pink. The skin cells in his earlobes, fingers,
and toes still absorbed oxygen and nutrients and expelled waste
products. His lungs moved in and out, and his beating heart
still pumped blood and oxygen to cells throughout his body. But
he could not easily be described as either living or dead. He
had clenched, turned-in hands and could not speak or move
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or respond to sound. The tools of modern lifesaving had forced
upon him the sufferings of life without its joys and the helpless-
ness of death without its peace.
What was left of the doctor lingered for three weeks, experi-
encing seizures and projectile vomiting. Doctors and nurses fed
him intravenously, gave him blood transfusions, administered
antibiotics to ward off pneumonia, and cut a hole in his windpipe
to keep his airway clear. The man’s heart stopped for the last time
as the hospital team prepared to attach him to a respirator. “This
case report is submitted for publication without commentary or
conclusions,” wrote Dr. Symmers, “which are left for those who
may read it to provide for themselves. . . . The identity of those
concerned and of their country is beside the point.”
My parents, like most people outside the field of medicine, were
virtually oblivious to the moral quandaries arising, beyond the
little that surfaced in an occasional issue of
Time
or
Life
. They were in their forties in the late 1960s, youthful and healthy,
recently arrived at Wesleyan, and busy with other things, like
making new friends, building another Techbuilt, and establish-
ing themselves in Middletown. My mother was in a graduate
program, earning a master of arts in teaching. I was a junior at
Wesleyan, studying Shakespeare and Virginia Woolf and living
off-campus. My brother Michael was at an experimental board-
ing school in upstate New York, and Jonathan was struggling
through a local boys’ Catholic high school, serving as coxswain
for a crew club he’d organized on the Connecticut River and
fixing cars in his spare time.
In the fall of 1970, when my mother was forty-seven and
teaching art at Deep River High School, the surgical advances
pioneered at the Brigham by Francis Daniels Moore may well
have saved her life. She found a lump in her left breast. At Mid-
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dlesex Hospital, she was given a radical mastectomy, the drastic
surgical approach then in fashion. The surgeon removed her
breast, much of the muscle of her left chest wall, a hard can-
cerous tumor the size of a walnut, and four cancerous lymph
nodes, including one totally eclipsed by a metastasized second
tumor. This was a sign that cancer cells had drifted through her
lymph fluid and might have spread elsewhere in her body. After
six months of grueling radiation treatments, she drove with my
father to Boston to meet with Dr. Moore at the Brigham. She
was worried about a recurrence.
Francis Daniels Moore was fifty-eight then and still the
Brigham’s chief of surgery. Gray-haired and upright, he counted
advanced breast cancer among his many fields of expertise. He
was aware, as was my mother, of the risks she faced. As he later
wrote in his autobiography, “The stark reality is that almost all
patients who enter this wilderness of advanced disease [that is, a
recurrence after an initial treatment for breast cancer] will die.”
He took substantial time with her, examined her lumpy but non-
cancerous remaining breast, and advised her to have it removed
as well, to be on the safe side. She took his advice and survived
the simple mastectomy he performed. Her cancer never returned.
She had no regrets about sacrificing her breasts for a shot
at saving her life. She was grateful to Moore and to her cancer
support group and her radiation techs for her survival—as well
as to her own formidable life force. But cancer changed her.
She read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s
Cancer Ward
and Elizabeth
Kübler-Ross’s 1969 bestseller,
On Death and Dying.
She looked
her own death in the face.
She photographed herself naked, her scarred and bony chest
exposed to her Nikkormat camera. She developed the negatives
in the darkroom my father had built her, made a few prints,
showed nobody, and filed them carefully away along with the con-
tact sheets. She put up her blonde-streaked hair in her signature
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French twist just as she’d always done, continued to dress impec-
cably, and went out into the world as the beautiful woman she’d
always been. She never had reconstructive surgery, and after a few
years she stopped tucking her sloshy, saline-filled replacement
boobs into her bra, and lived instead as a flat-chested woman.
Instead of returning to teaching art, she ferried more than
one faculty wife stricken by cancer to her chemotherapy
appointments and helped shepherd them and other women to
their deaths. She was glad to be alive, among the lucky ones,
but the more she saw of American medicine at the brink of
death, the more she questioned its tendency to overreach. In
1977, as she was emerging psychically from the shadow of her
own cancer, she spent time with a divorced faculty wife named
Bolly Hassan, who had pancreatic cancer, one of the disease’s
deadliest forms. Bolly was given a surgery called the Whipple
procedure, an eviscerating, last-ditch approach far more radi-
cal than my mother’s radical mastectomy, more damaging to
the quality of a patient’s remaining life, and with real but slim
chances of prolonged success. The Whipple removed the can-
cerous head of Bolly’s pancreas, her entire gall bladder, and a
portion of her small intestine and stomach. What was left of her
internal organs was reconnected to her remaining large intes-
tine. It didn’t work. As Bolly lay dying in the hospital, skin and
bones and barely conscious, a nurse came in once a day to move
her body to a bedside scale for weighing, a pointless operation
that made Bolly whimper, until my mother said to the nurse,
“She’s dying! Can’t you see she’s in pain?” and insisted she stop.
My mother’s disquiet was not unique. The new technologies
seemed to have blunted medical staff to the suffering their proce-
dures caused the dying, and they often postponed death without
restoring health. They created unrealistic hopes of immortality
in some doctors and patients and bred a toxic mistrust between
them that persists to this day. They helped produce doctors of
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great technical prowess and limited training in emotional com-
munication. And they brought to light a lack of cultural consen-
sus about the doctor’s evolving moral role near the end of life.
From the plagues of the Black Death during the Middle
Ages through the epidemics of typhoid, cholera, scarlet fever,
and tuberculosis that blighted later centuries, doctors, like their
patients, moved through a world of random, widespread, and
premature death. They understood death as a given throughout
the life span. There was usually little they could do except sug-
gest remedies like port wine, bloodletting, and mercury. So they
sat with the dying in their suffering, predicted the coming of
the final crisis, and waited. They accepted the natural course
of events.
After the mid-1950s, the attitudes of doctors and patients
alike shifted from faith in God and acceptance of death to faith
in medicine and resistance to death. There was always
some-
thing,
no matter how ultimately futile, that
a doctor or nurse could do.
Patients weren’t always grateful. In a small rural hospital
in Virginia in the mid-1970s, a nurse came proudly to the bed
of an elderly woman whose life she’d saved by performing a
cardiopulmonary resuscitation that had cracked two of the old
woman’s ribs. “I will hate you till the day I die,” the old woman
said. “You took away my chance to go to heaven, and on top of