Ethics Case
Medical Students and Dying Patients
Virtual Mentor. December 2013, Volume 15, Number 12: 1027-1033.
Audrey Tan, DO
Kelsey is a first-year medical student in her second semester. One of
her classes focuses on bedside manner. The purpose of the course is to
give students time to speak with patients and understand their
perspectives—their knowledge, hopes, and fears. Kelsey and a few of her
classmates are assigned to a hospice, where each spends time talking in a
nonmedical capacity with a patient.
In the previous semester, the students heard lectures on how to take
histories from different types of patients (e.g., children, the elderly)
and on special topics (e.g., cultural sensitivity and end-of-life
care). Kelsey had had one lecture about talking with the elderly and one
lecture about end-of-life issues and options before her first visit to
the hospice.
On one trip, Kelsey was assigned to spend time with Mrs. Walsh, an
amiable 70-year-old woman who had entered hospice care 2 days earlier.
Mrs. Walsh’s chart said that she and her family members had elected to
discontinue chemotherapy, which was making her feel terrible and not
having any effect on her cancer, which had metastasized to her spine and
lungs. Mrs. Walsh had a do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order in place. The
visit was going well: Mrs. Walsh was talking happily about her husband,
her children, and her grandchildren. Then Mrs. Walsh related her
struggles with cancer and the decision to enter hospice care. Next Mrs.
Walsh began to talk about facing mortality and said she was frightened
about how she would die. She was not sure what the end would be like for
her and questioned whether hospice was the right choice, though she was
not really sure what would have been a better choice.
Throughout this time, Kelsey remained quiet. She wanted to empathize
with Mrs. Walsh, to encourage her to continue thinking about these tough
topics, and to ask questions that would help Mrs. Walsh flesh out her
own ideas. She wanted to talk about the other options (not having a DNR
order, receiving aggressive treatment, dying in an ICU on a ventilator)
in ways that might remind Mrs. Walsh why she and her family had chosen
hospice care in the first place. But Kelsey didn’t know whether she was
allowed to enter into this type of conversation with a patient—she’d
barely begun her medical training, after all.
Commentary
The end of life (EOL). The dying process.
Most physicians grapple
with caring for patients during this period in their lives, marked by
personal conflict, unfamiliarity, and anxiety.
For physicians, death is often seen not as an inevitable event and a
natural process but instead as a medical failure. The doctrine that
“saving lives” is the ultimate goal of medical care is one that is
transmitted beginning early in training and traditionally continues
through residency and into clinical practice. Put simply, overcoming
death is success in the medical world. Physicians spend 4 years learning
the ins and outs of this process—the medications, the procedures, and
the technology focused on evading death. Once death is near and medical
interventions have reached their limit, doctors often find themselves
lost and uncertain about how to proceed, feeling inadequate and, at
times, even experiencing a sense of dishonor and guilt about the death
of a patient.
In an article on physician learners’ perceptions of death, first-year
medical students were asked to anticipate their feelings after the
death of their first patient [1]. One said, “I’m going through all of
this training only to stand around and watch/help someone die” [1].
Another,
I feel afraid that I will not have the knowledge I need in order to save the life of a patient…. I am afraid I will need to tell family members of the unexpected death of a loved one…. I am afraid of what my colleagues will think and I wonder will they continue to trust me as a doctor [1].
Even the most highly revered humanist physicians describe discomfort
about caring for a dying patient. Abraham Verghese candidly writes of
his discomfort with death, undoubtedly expressing the sentiments of many
other physicians.
I had always felt inexpert when a patient was near death…. Give me a patient with massive gastric bleeding or ventricular fibrillation and I am a model of efficiency and purpose. Put me at a deathbed, a slow dying, and purpose is what I lack. I, who till then have been supportive, involved, can find myself mute, making my visits briefer, putting on an aura of great enterprise—false enterprise. I finger my printed patient list, study the lab results on the chart, which at this point have no meaning. For someone dealing so often with death, my ignorance felt shameful [2].
The fear, unease, and helplessness described in these passages are undeniable.
The end of life is also unpredictable. In the evolving world of
standardized medicine, algorithms and scores and clinical guidelines
have become commonplace. There are the Rivers protocol for sepsis, the
MELD score for liver failure, and the NEXUS criteria for diagnosing
cervical spine injuries. But, although there are general guidelines,
there are no set standards to help physicians navigate dying with a
patient and family. One patient may opt for continued parenteral
nutrition in the hopes of living until her daughter’s college
graduation. Another patient may opt to discontinue all aggressive
measures immediately if it means spending another day in the hospital
away from his wife. It is a poignant, individualized process that
requires delving into the more personal side of patients’ lives,
including their hopes, goals, and values. This is an uncomfortable place
for most physicians.
And, finally, there is the personal anxiety that physicians
experience around death. Doctors’ fears, thoughts, and concerns
surrounding death, a term coined “death anxiety,” preclude many from
speaking frankly and honestly with patients. This can “impair the
display of empathy on the physician’s part…. [The] physician’s fears may
be displayed in physician’s gestures and postures, which may influence
the proper communication” [3]. What is even more concerning is that,
according to studies, a personal fear of death may discourage
inexperienced medical professionals from breaking bad news to patients
[4]. Doctors’ own apprehensions may impede the provision of optimal
care.
These are the issues that arise for seasoned physicians encountering
death, and they are certainly magnified in a newly white-coated medical
student such as Kelsey. Despite this, she senses that Mrs. Walsh is
looking for support as she navigates the remainder of her life.
Understandably, Mrs. Walsh has questions, concerns and apprehensions,
but Kelsey is confused about how she is to help her through this
process. Is she allowed to enter this conversation? What are the goals?
As a learner, what are her boundaries?
There are two pieces to supporting a patient like Mrs. Walsh during
the dying process. The first is the exploratory piece—eliciting fears
and concerns, walking alongside the patient—inviting Mrs. Walsh’s full
participation in the process. The second is the supportive piece. This
is the part during which physicians allay fears, provide information,
and support the patient through this journey. “Communication can be a
route to finding meaning in death and to making and deepening
connections with the living” [5]. During the dying process, Richard
McQuellon and Michael Cowan explain [6], “conversation is the bridge
that permits professional and family caregiver to join in the experience
of living-toward-death” [7]. By engaging in conversation with Mrs.
Walsh, Kelsey can help her glean life-enhancing meaning and value from a
situation in which many find only despair.
This is much more easily said than done, and, although Kelsey senses
the need to talk to Mrs. Walsh, doing so can be difficult. The first
step in conversing with patients near death is allowing oneself to “go
there.” For professional caregivers, family members, spiritual care
chaplains, or any caregiver, this is often the most challenging part. To
many people, the topic of death is to be avoided [8], and even hospice
nurses have admitted to diverting conversations away from concerns about
illness or feelings because they did not know what to say, felt
inadequate or intrusive, or did not want to upset the patient [5]. For
physicians and physician learners, recognition and acceptance of this
discomfort is a critical first step.
After these reservations are acknowledged, physicians must recognize
the difficult but important task of moving forward and creating the
space that makes it easier for patients to enter this difficult
conversation. The best way of doing so, oftentimes, is just sitting with
the patient. “Conversation is more than exchanging words; sometimes all
it requires is silent, attentive presence” [9]. Beyond simple presence,
Patricia Thompson writes that “you must try to go where the patient is
mentally…on a street corner waiting for the trolley rather than in a
nursing home, if necessary. Inquire about the patient’s past. Empathize
with the patient’s feelings even if you have to throw reality out the
window” [10]. As is taught during introductory classes of medical
school, open-ended questions directed at comprehension and expectations
are helpful. “Mrs. Walsh, what is your understanding of your disease?”
“What are your hopes and concerns for the remainder of your life?”
Physicians must realize that patients in “mortal time,” the
psychological state human beings enter when confronted with the prospect
of death [6], move back and forth from everyday coping to thoughts and
feelings about their impending death. Coping is a dynamic process with
peaks during which acceptance predominates and valleys during which
questions, worries, fears, and doubts predominate. Patients may
vacillate between the two, the peaks or valleys may predominate, or
patients may be elsewhere, a place where they need time and space to
gain footing as they grapple with their diseases.
The power of embracing this process of exploration and conversation is very eloquently described by McQuellon and Cowan:
Whatever the details of a fatal illness, and however great the differences in backgrounds, roles and responsibilities of those communicating about it, authentic conversation has the power not only to enhance how people cope practically with dying, but to illuminate and enrich the very meaning of life for patients and caregivers alike as they enter the sacred moment of mortal time together. The terrifying and liberating paradox of mortal time is that in order to tap the depth of meaning available to those facing death together, we must embrace what we mortals fear and ordinarily avoid with every fiber of our being. We must turn toward death together [11].
This is the extraordinarily powerful piece that Kelsey can certainly partake in with Mrs. Walsh.
The second portion of this process is providing guidance. Mrs. Walsh
wants to speak about this process but she is also searching for
direction and support. She has doubts which require thoughtful guidance.
Though these two steps are certainly not separate processes, they are
divided for the purpose of delineating roles for a physician learner.
This is the role that requires experience and clinical knowledge. It
is a complex process. As a clinician, your goals in this context are
many and include affirming that you will not abandon the patient or
patient’s family, informing the patient about the pros and cons of
further aggressive disease-modifying treatments, exploring advanced
directives, and discussing palliative care options including aggressive
pain and symptom management, all communicated in a compassionate and
kind manner.
How will Kelsey be trained to do this?
Medical school training in caring for patients at the end of life is
evolving slowly. Although the necessity of teaching end-of-life care in
medical school curricula has been established, educators continue to
struggle to find the optimal means and venues for teaching these skills.
Currently, most of EOL education occurs in the preclinical years, often
in the form of lectures focused primarily on knowledge, including the
legal aspects of advance directives, the key topics of palliative care,
and the basics of skillful communication, rather than skills and
attitudes [12]. These lectures are useful in laying the groundwork for
quality EOL care, but, just as with most other skills, formal
instruction must continue within the clinical setting.
In one study, the gaps in medical education were evident. When
fourth-year medical students were asked to describe their clinical
experiences with end-of-life care, they described situations in which
they “stood frozen,” not knowing what to do, and scenarios during which
they “did not have enough medical experience to explain the necessity or
issues surrounding intubation, respirators, etc., to concerned
patients, and certainly did not have the medical knowledge to advise
patients on such major decisions” [13]. One student felt as if she were
“left to her own devices” in caring for a patient with end-stage lung
cancer [13].
In a study of third-year medical students, all reported that they had
cared for a dying patient, yet 41 percent had not observed a physician
talking to a dying patient, 35 percent had never discussed care of a
dying patient with the attending physicians, and 85 percent had never
witnessed a surgeon telling a family that someone had died [14].
Why does this seem to be the case? As Grauel and colleagues argue,
“competence in the care of the terminally ill is an area that many
physicians have considered to be of low priority” [15] and, thus, though
students and residents are put in situations where they are confronted
with these issues on a daily basis, they are learning about care at the
EOL through “baptism by fire.” Though there is undoubtedly value in
learning through actual patient encounters and direct exposure in the
clinical setting, supervision and guidance during these difficult
conversations is a critical component that is often overlooked.
The literature on medical education consistently argues that learning
about end-of-life care in all its forms should be integrated into
rather than isolated from the rest of the curriculum [12]. Although
in-classroom lectures are necessary and important, the process of
learning needs to be continued in the clinical setting. It is within
this forum, during the day-to-day clinical encounters, that
doctor-family communication can be developed, initially through
observation and then through such methods as direct feedback and
debriefing sessions.
The value of mentorship cannot be overemphasized. This can mean
working under the tutelage of other practitioners who are more
experienced and comfortable with communication with dying patients, such
as social workers, hospice nurses, hospice volunteers or spiritual care
counselors. The multidisciplinary approach of hospice care is a rich
environment for medical students. In a study of medical students placed
within hospices, participants emphasized the importance of experienced
hospice volunteers, whom they regularly looked to for guidance and
support. Students reported that they learned much from observing their
volunteers’ communication skills and comfort with patients’ conditions
[16].
Kelsey finds herself in this setting, and it is the ideal environment
for her to begin to acknowledge her own personal anxieties surrounding
death as well as her own concerns and reservations as a budding medical
practitioner. She can look to the hospice practitioners, including the
physician, for guidance. And following her conversations, Kelsey can
look to debrief and explore her emotions and feelings regarding these
undoubtedly difficult encounters.
With the continued development of hospice and palliative medicine as a
specialty and the growing realization among educators, clinicians, and
administrators that EOL care requires as much emphasis as cardiology and
pediatrics, care at the EOL will certainly continue to gain momentum as
an area of focus and interest within medical school curricula. As this
occurs, physicians will enter clinical practice with increasing comfort
and ease in dealing with dying patients and, in turn, will serve as more
experienced and facile mentors and teachers for young physician
learners.
References
- Williams CM, Wilson CC, Olsen CH. Dying, death, and medical education: student voices. J Palliat Med. 2005;8(2):376.
- Verghese A. My Own Country. New York: Vintage Books; 1995:363-364.
- Ciałkowska-Rysz A, Dzierżanowski T. Personal fear of death affects the proper process of breaking bad news. Arch Med Sci. 2013;9(1):128.
- Ciałkowska-Rysz, Dzierżanowski, 131.
- Planalp S, Trost MR. Communication issues at the end of life: reports from hospice volunteers. Health Commun. 2008;23(3):224.
- McQuellon RP, Cowan MA. Turning toward death together: conversation in mortal time. Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2000;17(5):312-318.
- McQuellon, Cowan, 316.
- Becker, E. The Denial of Death. New York: Free Press; 1973.
- McQuellon, Cowan, 317.
- Thompson PM. Communicating with dementia patients on hospice. Am J Alzheimers Dis Other Demen. 2002;17(5):265.
- McQuellon, Cowan, 318.
- Wear D. “Face-to-face with it”: medical students’ narratives about their end-of-life education. Acad Med. 2002;77(4):271-277.
- Wear, 273.
- Rappaport W, Witzke D. Education about death and dying during clinical years of medical school. Surgery. 1993;113(2):163-165.
- Grauel RR, Eger R, Finley RC, et al. Educational program in palliative and hospice care at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. J Cancer Educ. 1996;11(3):144-147.
- Stecho W, Khalaf R, Prendergast P, Geerlinks A, Lingard L, Schulz V. Being a hospice volunteer influenced medical students’ comfort with dying and death: a pilot study. J Palliat Care. 2012:28(3):149-156.
Audrey Tan, DO,
is an assistant professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at
SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York. Dr. Tan completed
her emergency medicine residency at Kings County Hospital Center/SUNY
Downstate Medical Center and a fellowship in hospice and palliative
medicine at New York Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center.
Acknowledgement
The author would like to thank John Saroyan, MD, for his thoughtful comments and suggestions on this manuscript.
Related in VM
The people and events in this case are fictional. Resemblance to real events or to names of people, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. The viewpoints expressed on this site are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the AMA.
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