Medical Students Don’t Learn About Death

The following is part 1 in a series about death and dying in the medical context. This reflection was written by me earlier this year, before I sought out a Palliative Medicine elective. Part 2 will follow soon.

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Until the last week of my sub-internship, I had never had a patient die on my watch. To be sure, I had patients on the cusp of dying – and some who did die, of course, when I was already on another rotation. I have been around dying patients who were on our team but were being taken care of by the other resident/medical student. But never a patient of my own, until my final year of medical school.

I have never been sure whether to consider myself lucky or unlucky. Is that a morbid way to think about it? That maybe I was lucky (and my patients were lucky) that they didn’t die on my watch? That maybe I was lucky that I hadn’t had to experience those awful and heartbreaking conversations with a patient’s family. In the Russian roulette game of hospital care and medical education, I felt spared.

At the same time – and I feel almost selfish for saying this – I considered myself unlucky. I had never been around a dying patient. I had never known what it meant to take care of someone in their final days. I had never had the opportunity to learn and grow as a person and a physician from those difficult moments.

My first clinical experience with death was during my sub-internship, with a woman with end-stage ovarian cancer. I had scrubbed in on her most recent debulking surgery, and I had followed her post-operatively. Though her overall prognosis was poor, she was progressing well after this most recent operation. Her pain and abdominal bloating were slightly improved. She was even about ready to go to a rehab facility; all the arrangements had been made for transfer.

But then she started failing – started not being able to get out of bed. Started being more confused about herself and her surroundings. Started sleeping more of the day. She was physically and mentally breaking down. The cancer burden was overwhelming her body, and she was not able to hold up.

This experience was undoubtedly sad, but the experience for me was compounded by the suddenness and relative unexpectedness of it all. “She was not dying when I met her!” I naively believed.

She did have terminal cancer, after all.

The emotional impact was heightened for me because of the fact that only one of her family members was with her until the end. I felt bad that nobody she knew from outside the hospital was there for; yet I hope our medical team was able to be a somewhat second family to her in her final days. I visited in on her, spoke with her relative, did everything non-medical I thought to try to make her comfortable (I didn’t know much).

When she passed, I imagined the briefest moment of stillness amongst the chaos, but the hospital quickly moved on. There was no closure, no reflection, almost no conversation. When the other team members who had helped take care of her found out the news, there was a general statement of sadness, but then it was back to work as usual. There was more work to be done, other patients to take care of.

I heard that the nursing and floor teams held a small commemoration for our patient later that week (as they do for any patient on the cancer floor who dies). I wasn’t aware it was happening, and I’m positive none of the medical team was present.

Do doctors not mourn, too? Don’t we all need a moment to breathe, to reflect on our relationship with that patient, and to acknowledge our emotions about their passing?

Why don’t they prepare us for this?

markmdmph

The following is part 1 in a series about death and dying in the medical context. This reflection was written by me earlier this year, before I sought out a Palliative Medicine elective. Part 2 will follow soon.

death_and_dying-300x239

Until the last week of my sub-internship, I had never had a patient die on my watch. To be sure, I had patients on the cusp of dying – and some who did die, of course, when I was already on another rotation. I have been around dying patients who were on our team but were being taken care of by the other resident/medical student. But never a patient of my own, until my final year of medical school.

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Big Pharma Creates Public School Vaccine Petri Dish in Temecula, CA

Local school districts around the country are under the thumb of vaccine pushing state laws which are financed and pushed by Big Pharma to expand the list of mandatory shots thereby creating a sick disease ridden population. The latest example is from the Temecula Valley school district that scares parents into thinking that it’s the law to inject toxic substances, live viruses, and animal DNA into your body. The neglect to mention that the exemption forms that exist in all but two states in the union. Read the damn insert and educate yourself before you inject yourself.

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Atascadero woman finds out she could be exposed to Hepatitis B, C & HIV

It has been several days since hundreds of letters from the Santa Barbara County health Department were mailed to patients of a local clinic.  Those letters warn patients to get tested for Hepatitis B, C, and HIV. 

“It’s the accident that just keeps on giving,” says Teresa Turner, a resident of Atascadero.

In 2011, 55-year old Turner says a drunk driver crashed into her, sending her to Dr. Allen Thomashefsky’s Santa Barbara Medical Clinic.

“Dr. Thomashefsky is a very friendly person, he seems to be a good guy,” says Turner.  “The office was very clean and there was nothing out of the ordinary.”

At his office, Turner says she underwent therapy.

“Neck, back, and abdominal muscle,” says Turner.  “I had several injections.”

When say this week’s news, a familiar face came up.

“It was announcing who the doctor was and it was Dr. Thomashefsky,” says Turner.

A phone call later to the Santa Barbara County Health Department, Turner was told she needs to get tested for possible Hepatitis B, C, and HIV.  An appointment that could not come soon enough.

“Monday although it is only a couple of days away, it seems like it is very far away,” says Turner.  “They are infectious diseases and I am concerned that they could have been shared with someone else.”

Turner says she knows the test results could be life changing.

 

“If I was to be infected by one of those, you feel like you are kind of labeled with a virus, how are people going to treat you,” says Turner.

 

She has made an appointment with her doctor in Paso Robles and hopes her story will help others take the necessary steps to move on.

 

“Because you don’t want to hide from this,” says Turner.  “It is a very important and serious issue and you have to go on that path and deal with it.”

 

Atascadero woman finds out she could be exposed to HIV, Hepatiti.