Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Doctors, Mothers And Daughters, Death and Caring, Writing

This isn’t a confession of matricide, but technically speaking, I did kill my mom. Both JAMA and the New England Journal of Medicine have one 1,200 word personal essay per issue. I used to avoid them. I thought, probably unfairly, that they were written by stuffy older men dispensing what they considered their wisdom, as some of my self-satisfied Harvard Medical School (HMS) teachers used to do. I think that opinion said more about me than it did about them. It also reflected the press of time and the relentless appearance of the journals in the mail every week. You took the journals in the hope that you wouldn't miss important things. You also hoped that each issue had nothing important so you could accomplish your self-assigned task expeditiously and just discard it – triaging limited time. But that has changed. I still hope for articles without interest so I can clear the kitchen table more easily. Accomplishing tasks quickly will probably be a life-constant until I die – well, that's hopeful, isn't it? Still functional until the very end? Here's hoping. But now, instead of dismissing the essay, I look forward to them. I know that I have changed, but have the articles changed? Maybe. For one thing, a lot of them are now written by women. Women in medicine! Thank God for the women in medicine! Like it or not, women write differently from men, because like it or not, women are different from men. Talk about adding needed balance. Every patient should have a choice between a woman or a man for their doctor, because they're just different, not all the time, but lots of times. And we medical readers should have the same choice. So in this current NEJM issue, Stanford woman neurologist and palliative care researcher , Hannah Kirsch, writes about killing her mother. See My Mother's Choices – https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2410639. She a hell of a writer, this one. So many of the 1,200 words writers now are really good – the liberal arts persist in medicine. Good words, punchy, each sentence counts. Great introductory sentence: This isn’t a confession of matricide, but technically speaking, I did kill my mom. Men can and do write like that, of course, and sensibilities are not segregated by sex. But one thing is segregated by sex. That thing is the relationship between mother and daughter. There's just something about that relationship that's different. I read two books in the last couple of years that if you haven't read, you should, especially since they're not only great, they're short. One is Annie Ernaux's remembrance of her mother on the occasion of her death, A Woman's Story. She is raised by her ambitious mother in the working class of Yvetot, Normandy. Annie replaces a sister who died at age six. What is the effect of replacement? We don't know, but it affects all of them. We'll try again. They're trying again with me. Most of us carry the burden of expectations, they propel us forward, they give us a sense of mission that comes not just from us. I titled the book that one of my characters wrote in my unpublishable French novel, “Amour, Cadeau ou Fardeau ?” Love, gift or burden? My character, Juliette, means it in romantic love, but clearly, that's not the only love nor the only gift nor the only burden. Annie turns out to be very, very smart, and grows up to write books I love, books of genius, books worthy of the 2022 Nobel Prize for literature. But along the way, inevitably, her growth and excellence, fueled by her mother, draws her away from her mother. Her sensibilities change. Her social class changes. Her interests widen. Her conversation is at a higher level. Annie is bored at the narrow working class conversation around the family table when she returns from Rouen or other place of residence. It is the gulf her mother hopes for and then suffers from. Annie is dutiful. After her father dies and Annie is living in eastern France, her mother comes to live with her and her husband and her two sons. Grandmother takes care of the grandsons, meets some people, and it is one of the happiest times of her life, maybe her happiest time. When Annie moves to an anonymous Paris suburb around the Boulevard Périphérique, known as the Périph, that time is over. There are no friends to make here. So her mother moves away, back to Yvetot I think, and then she dies of Alzheimer's, and Annie reevaluates the long course of mother-daughter love. The closeness, the identification, the irritations, the impatience, the guilt, the duties, the rupture. Growing up. Love is such a mixture of contending feelings sometimes. Father and sons have it, sure, but not like mothers and daughters, I think. The other book you have to read is Simone de Beauvoir's A Very Easy Death, another short book that is easily read. “Easy Death” is what someone says in all sincerity after her mom dies, but after what we've read, we understand it as an ironic title. I've come to think – is any death “easy?” Simone gets more of her ambition from her rather unsuccessful father, I think, and from her inborn indomitable will – as a toddler she lies on her back on the floor and screams from frustration and no one can stop her – than from her very religious mother who easily accepts her place in a man's bourgeois world. When Simone loses her faith, she becomes a lost soul to her mother's anguish. When she grows into her life as perhaps the most notable woman of the 20th century – I think I love Simone – I think her mother gradually accepts her new status, but the bitterness of the gulf remains. I have to read the second volume of her memoir to really know what happened to them, but the first volume is striking and even lacerating. It must be hard to talk when you come to such different stations in life. But then her mother gets cancer and is going to die, and gradually does just that, Simone and her younger sister Poupette tending to her together. A dying mother, a mother who raised you, who you were so close to, who facilitated your rise in life, and who you left behind perhaps bitterly, who pissed you off, but a relationship of love you can't leave behind, it just sneaks around another corner. Her mother is not told she has terminal cancer, the doctors won't listen to slowing down their fruitless pursuit of cure, but then she must accept it even if unspoken. She sits in bed with one arm around Poupette and one arm around Simone and she says, “My girls. That's all I really want, my girls.” And I cry. So now we have women in medicine, and they can write about their mothers. I heard about this one incident from a friend who hasn't written about it. A woman doctor friend of mine at HMS lost her mother last year to cancer. As her mother got sick, she needed tending to back home in the Southwest.. Their relationship had been fraught, especially as her mom had divorced and become a single mom with all the intimacy with a daughter that that can entail. Do you drop everything to tend to a mother with whom you have had a tenuous relationship? My friend did; she took leave and went back and tend to her mom, she was glad she did, but it was never easy. But she did what a daughter has to do. I'm not sure it brought resolution to their relationship; I suspect it didn't. But she did what was right, and I'm sure she did it with great compassion, because that's who she is. Hannah's relationship with her mother was similarly fraught, and as part of her reflection, not to say resolution, she writes about the death by assisted suicide, movingly and beautifully. As for all of us who are doctors, when our parents or our wives or our husbands die, we are both daughters and doctors, husbands and doctors, and sometimes we are parents and doctors. Our HMS classmate Gerry Rogell presented us, his HMS classmates, just recently, this very same ambiguity and dilemma when his wife was ill with Covid. We are sons and daughters and husbands wives with special powers. As doctors we struggle with how close to get with our patients, how close we can afford to get, how apart we need to stay. We struggle each in our own way. I wonder if the special power, knowledge, makes it easier or harder. I think it made it easier for me when my wife was sick and dying – I was oriented to the field, and I did adapt to being instructed and leaning on caregivers and nurses, because as a pediatrician, we could all accept that I knew things as a doctor but didn't know things as a child's doctor. In my friend Gerry's case, it was a little harder, because he had to decide whether or not to press for a medical course that he thought might be indicated, and didn't know at that point whether to act as a doctor or a husband, and was tortured by that choice. But in Hannah's case, dealing with a difficult mother with strong independence needs, just like Annie and Simone and Gerry, was it easier or harder? Actually, it seems to me that it was easier. She knew medical expectations. She knew endpoints. She had seen many courses that patients had taken. She could navigate the mother-daughter relationship with that information giving her perspective. As a doctor she knew how to talk, so instead of rejecting her mother's request instantly as impossible, she takes a minute and says, “What makes you ask that now?” And she continues, until the end, when her mother chooses not to surrender to decay but to choose herself when and how to go, and Hannah mixes the deadly elixir and gives it to her mother to drink. I never let her, or any of the other people at her deathbed, perceive what roiled between my agonized detachment. I wanted someone else to be in charge, even though I couldn't let go of the iron control of the 'primary caregiver.' I wanted to inhale the dregs of the mixture in the hope of sleeping, not forever, but long enough to resolve the conflict between my personal desires and my professional commitment. I wanted to curl up in her lap, just the two of us in the room, and weep, begging her not to do this, telling her that I need her to tell me I'm her special girl, that I'm scared and need my mom. And I cry. Maybe you see why I'm not skipping the little personal essays anymore. Budd Shenkin

Monday, February 17, 2025

To Thwart A Coup

 My son Peter sent me this podcast from Ezra Klein.

 https://youtu.be/K8QLgLfqh6s

Here is my response:

I agree, this is very good.  Thanks for calling my attention to it.  It's a call to sanity, but I'm still fearful that Trump will have all these powers.  The fork in the road will come when the courts rule against him and he disobeys, which is what he's setting up to do. I don't believe for a moment that he won't defy the courts. Andrew Jackson did it successfully, which led to the Trail of Tears.  Eventually his party petered out, but nowadays, I fear that won't happen.  I fear that partially because the Democrats are so weak and feckless.  They need to reorganize - I give one idea: https://buddshenkin.blogspot.com/2025/02/will-there-be-credible-resistance.html.

If you have a firehose of issues coming down from Trump, you need to respond in an organized way, and defend everything, speak up forcefully, explain and persuade the populace.  They should engage on Ukraine - Trump is now changing sides, making us Russian allies -- Presidential strength is greatest in foreign policy as you know.  The Dems need to address this, need to actively recruit Republicans - ask them if they are ready to support Communists.  This could be a real rift in the Republican party, but because "voters don't care about foreign policy," the uninspired Dems will instead concentrate on egg prices.

I find myself being frustrated with the Dems and even being angry at them.  I think it's because of team sports.   I expect the Cowboys to try to be strong; I don't criticize them for that.  But if the Niners don't mount a credible opposition, I'm frustrated with them for failing us.  Schumer and Jeffries have adopted a strategy of saying, "We have no power!"  They're planning to pin everything on the Republicans.  That's correct in a way, but the optics are awful - how do you inspire people by declaring "We have no power?"  That's why there needs to be a group of excellent, aggressive, eloquent Dems who organize themselves and dare the rest of the party to follow them.

I don't expect anything from the congressional Republicans, actually.  They are less representatives than they are paid agents - they are married to their jobs, their jobs depend on election funding, and with SCOTUS vetoing any election funding reform (SCOTUS bought and paid for by wealthy right wing), congressional Republicans are just paid agents.  But some of them might be embarrassed if they were held up as supporting Russian communists.  Try defending that one.  Or maybe I'm wrong and isolationism would prove to be more popular.

Will the Trump revolution succeed?  Are we really so soft that traditional democracy will be lost?  Will the increasing failures of government under Musk and Trump make people value government more, or will they take it as evidence that government sucks?  There are many forks in the road and that's hard to predict, but I tend to think about quality of leadership.  If strong and decisive leadership does not emerge on the Dem side, then I think our culture can collapse back to the racist past, at least to some extent.  This team is bent on destruction, and destruction is easy, it's building that is hard.  Can the South African apartheid metastasis that we're seeing now actually prove lasting in a US that has come so far since the 60's?  Is all that reversible?  It's hard to think that it is.

I guess in the end I have to be hopeful, to believe that the evolved culture of the US as we experience it where we live will prove durable.  I have to believe that there will be enormous pushback and that Trump and Trumpism will die, sooner or later.  I'm just hoping for sooner.  I'm hoping for leadership to emerge stronger than ever.  I have to believe that leadership will emerge from the states.  If Trump & Co. make the feds weak, then the states will become stronger, and leadership will emerge from there.

But in the end, who knows?

What do you think?  You have a certain reasonableness of levelheadedness that I always find bracing.  I'm so glad you majored in poli-sci.
 
Budd Shenkin

 

Friday, February 14, 2025

Will There Be A Credible Resistance?

 

I think a lot depends on how the Dems can organize themselves in resistance. Leaders must be allowed to emerge. Congressional Dem leadership now is old and abysmal.  They need a War Council, and regular Addresses to the Nation analyzing what's going on, and how it's a coup, an autogolpe, or a revolution, and pointing out in detail what they're doing and how they're lying about it.  

Who can do this?  Buttigieg can explain it, others are eloquent and passionate, but they are all either backbenchers, or sometimes governors.  They need to organize themselves as The Democratic Resistance, and challenge the rest of the Dems to follow and join them, or not.  That would capture the country's attention, give media somewhere to go, and set up for the lawsuits which are already progressing, and most importantly, for 2026 elections.  Each Dem would have to choose, are you an active resister, or not?  Through this, the candidate for the 2028 election, should there be one, would emerge.

What they obviously cannot do is to rely on their current congressional leadership.  Schumer and Jeffries might be effective insiders, but Schumer is an awful public speaker -- reads his remarks into the rostrum -- and Jeffries struggles.  Their task is to hold the Dems together within their chambers; swaying the nation is not in their remit.

Anyway, that's my take.  Even this might not work, because SCOTUS has already been captured, so many other courts (Aileen Cannon, Judge S. in Amarillo, etc.).  This War Council, plus the states, with active AG's and Governors in the blue states, are the last hope.  Popular movements, demonstrations, etc., I would think would only arise with good leadership explaining what is happening and gathering adherents that the people could rally around.  Remember what Allard Lowenstein had to do -- find a candidate.


Budd Shenkin

Thursday, February 13, 2025

The Fruits Of Aging

 

As you get old, you accumulate wisdom.

As you get old, you make more mistakes, or continue with the old ones but they get worse.

Which is it?

I think it's both.

It's just like it's always been - you try your best, and try to forgive and get others to forgive your mistakes.

Sometimes it works.

Monday, January 20, 2025

How The World Is Organized -- The Trump Model

 


What is going on with Trump's view of the world? He wants to stop supporting Ukraine, is very iffy on NATO, hasn't said much about Taiwan, but wants to flex on Mexico, Canada, Panama? What's up?

I can't review all the different ways of organizing the world – not my area of expertise – but clearly we have had empires (Rome, China, British), and we have had configurations of independent states with balanced power(Europe after the Council of Vienna). We've had a system of international laws that recognize countries' boundaries and strive not to interfere internally in their affairs (never really respected). We've had a dual-centric world – USSR vs. USA in the Cold War. We've had systems where armed interventions are supposed to be abjured – post WW I. And so on. Some would say the world has always been organized by strict power, and ideas to stop war and rule by recognized rights is most a modern attempt. But as I say, it's not my field.

So, as far as I've been alive, the world has been dominated by the thought that we should have a universally recognized system of laws and avoid wars. At least, that's what I've seen. Now we have challenges to that, as the Chinese seem to say that this so-called system of rights and respect is hypocritical, and just hides the continuation of the long era of Western domination. And now, it seems, we have a new view, probably a view that would be called “realist,” from Trump.

That view seems to be this: We know that Trump has fancied himself a realist of the thuggery of the world. He has idolized gangsters. He thinks it realistic to understand that countries kill people, they just hide it. The states are all hypocritical, Trump thinks, they say one thing and do something else. The words are on the surface, but it's something else beneath.

He liked to hang out at construction sites at his father's buildings. The working class sees power and people being compelled, not cajoled and persuaded. He himself likes to bully. A lot. So, I think he sees the natural order of the world being based on power and ruthlessness. That would mean that strong states bully weak states, especially nearby ones. This leads to a multi-centric world where regional powers dominate their neighborhood. This is an ancient situation, where transportation and communication was none, or months, or years. In those days a regional power would think of themselves as a world power, because their worlds were small. Nowadays, we know better than to think ourselves isolated, but with the threat of nukes keeping world powers at a distance and enforcing limits, no one should really aspire to world domination, but they can aspire to regional domination.

Who is this reminiscent of? Well, that was the world Hitler envisioned. Let the Japanese dominate the East, let the USA dominate the Americas, and let Germany dominate Europe. Hitler couldn't see why others didn't agree. That's also – relevant to Trump – the view of the Mafia. Let one group dominate Buffalo and don't bother them, cooperate when possible. We keep Brooklyn and Queens, let others have New Jersey. We can compete in new areas, like Las Vegas, but we won't threaten the home territories of the other families. And in both these cases, Hitler and the mafia, force is the dominant influence.

So that's the way Trump sees the international organization. That's why he thought Putin's invasion of Ukraine was brilliant. He surely understands Xi's determination to take Taiwan, with Hong Kong already digested. He thinks it's just weak for the US to allow nearby weaker states to be independent – why don't we dominate them the way the USSR dominated Eastern Europe? It's our right, because we're strong. Mutual respect of borders and sovereignty is stupid and weak, to Trump's understanding.

And what do the leaders of these blocs do? They make sure they get themselves rich. Putin is reportedly the richest man in the world. I hear that he has a deal with each oligarch that he, Putin, personally, has a 50% interest in each of their enterprises. That's why Trump idolizes him. Of course! He's the strongest and that's what he deserves. He's due it. That's exactly what Trump thinks he's due. It's the way of the world, the true order, not this made up stuff about mutual respect and ideals. Realism.

So, no mystery. We don't interfere with the way other dominant states rule their area, and we don't care what they do. Human Rights? Gimme a break. That's made up stuff by the Sunday School crowd. Me, I'm a realist, Donald the Realist. He was the strongest in his family and he dominated them, he was the strongest in the Republican field, and now he's the strongest in the country. Don't give me that stuff about right and wrong.

For starters, Donald no doubt wants a 50% personal interest in the Panama Canal, and a 50% interest in each Canadian energy company.

Why not?


Budd Shenkin

Friday, January 17, 2025

Humanistic Care - Defining and Implementing

 
Medicine is supposed to be humane, kind and caring – to be humanistic.  Yet both patients and doctors complain that our current system lacks precisely that quality.  Patients complain that their doctors often don't get to know them well, that when they are sickest they are cared for by strangers in non-patient-centered teams, and that they get lost, neglected, and delayed in a complex system.  Doctors complain about burnout, alienation, even moral injury, as they, too, miss the human connection with patients and regret the systematic obstacles they face.

Two prominent influences for this decline are, ironically, the great advances in Biomedicine (BioM), and the ubiquitous business methods utilized in medical care organizations.  The proliferation of specialists, procedures, and studies has presented organizational challenges, and efforts to achieve systematic efficiency, productivity, and profit have often given short shrift to the necessity of warm human interactions.

The loss of Humanistic Medicine (HM) is not inevitable, but it must be understood if it is to be protected and reintroduced to the system.  First, HM should be defined.  Second, we should examine its composition, to decide if HM is central to the mission of medicine, or if it is only a frill that might as well be neglected.  And third, we should define some necessary steps to implement HM in practice.

Definition

The standard definitions of HM cite the actions of the doctor as the central factor.  One example: “the physician’s attitudes and actions that demonstrate interest in and respect for the patient and that address the patient’s concerns and values. These generally are related to patients’ psychological, social, and spiritual domains.”  Another source cites the “Three C's”: “(HM's) main components(are) 'comprehension' of the patient's narrative and importantly – emotions; leading to 'compassion' and a 'commitment' to act trying to help as much as possible.”

These definitions have two shortcomings.  First, they are process-oriented rather than outcome-oriented.  The desired outcome of HM is that the patient should feel known as a specific individual, not a cog in a wheel or as an input, and should feel cared for and cared about.  Second, even though the definitions do well in describing desirable physician HM actions, they are too narrow, because they ignore the contributions of other personnel, and the system of care itself.

A corollary to the outcome definition is also important: the benefits of HM accrue to the givers of care as well as the recipients.  Humans feel great satisfaction in giving to others.  Doctors, other caregivers, and even system planners and managers benefit from treating patients with high-level HM.  In fact, it can give significant meaning to their lives.

The Content and Extent of HM Services

HM is effected both by the organizational system of care and the individuals within the system.  The system's design and functioning let patients know if their needs come first or last.  For instance, are appointments made easily and timely, or (for instance) is a patient with a new cancer diagnosis made to wait in psychological anguish many weeks for a first appointment?  If it is the latter, that system could be accused of HM malpractice.  Likewise, is the length of an appointment tailored to individual needs, or is every patient wedged into the routine average time of a visit?  Is continuity of care respected, and are various specialists and tests all coordinated in a patient-centered way, is there always someone for the patient to turn to for personal help, or are patients left in the lurch?  These are just examples of the myriad of organizational HM factors.  Organizational leaders, system designers, software designers, human relations departments, managers and others are in charge of all these items of HM.  

All service industries have to accommodate customers, but medicine is a special service business.  No other line of business addresses “customers” so intimately, with such emotionally-laden, high-stakes and sometimes complex and dangerous pathways and decisions.  The pressure on patients and clinicians can be immense, as they deal with life, death, disease, disability, anxiety, and anguish.  Patients and their families need to be cared for with an intimate knowledge of their emotions, backgrounds, and beliefs, as the standard definitions point out.  Patients don't just need a reliable sales representative as with other businesses, they need someone whom they can trust with their most precious possession of life and health, someone with deep understanding and compassion and skill and reliability.  Figure One shows why HM is central to the medical mission, not peripheral.  Any system design or educational effort or practitioner neglecting that special responsibility of caring in medicine is in violation of the medicine's central mission, to cure when possible, but to care always.

Requirements to Implement HM Services

If HM has weakened, which seems to be the consensus, what is needed to strengthen it?  Most importantly, the priority of HM in health care organizations and medical schools should be promoted  to stand beside profit and BioM excellence as an equal top priority.  This takes leadership, but it also demands support in the ranks, most prominently from doctors, other caregivers, and patients, those who experience HM most directly.

Instead of the current lip service, this high priority must lead to sustained attention and devotion of resources.  Managers must be given the task of maximizing HM to the extent possible.  They must learn to implement HM-friendly conditions, developing processes that are more patient-centered and less factory-like.  Electronic communications should be an asset for HM, not an additional barrier.  Measures of HM must be developed, even if they are based on process rather than outcome, so that they can stand beside the current measures of productivity, financial profit and RVUs, both of which notoriously ignore HM, and in fact classify time spent on HM as waste.  Business management techniques are valuable, but the goals of medicine must be recognized as different from typical businesses.

Likewise, medical education must specifically target HM teaching, especially in clinical training, where HM teaching has often been assumed rather than specifically included, and where HM has often met the counterforce of an “informal curriculum” that discounts HM.  BioM is relentlessly taught and tested, appropriately, but HM needs its own emphasis in imaginative ways that suit it, and take it out of the shadows.  Every medical school typically has many HM-friendly personnel; they need to be mobilized into active contributors to a coherent HM effort.

Finally, incentives for practicing strong HM need to be harnessed.  Inherent idealism in students and practicing doctors is considerable, but in addition to idealism, HM productivity and excellence in teachers, practitioners, care teams, and managers needs to be recognized, celebrated, and paid well.  

Conclusion

While it is complex, HM is definable.  While BioM is of ultimate importance in curing, the caring provided by HM is a worthy partner.  Humanistic care is not a frill, it is essential to the medical mission.  

All organizational change is difficult, and strengthening HM will be no different.  But since the basic elements of HM are known, the task is mostly one of reengineering rather than of basic research.  With a readjustment of priorities and with devoted effort, it should be well within our current capabilities to re-humanize medicine.  Where there's a will, there's a way.

 

 

i. Gilsdorf, JR. No one in charge. N Engl J Med 2024;391:974-5.

ii. Dean W, Morris D, Llorca P-M, et al. Moral injury and the global health workforce crisis. N Engl J Med 2024;391:782-5.

iii.     Branch WT, Kern D, Haidet, et al. Teaching the human dimensions of care in clinical settings. JAMA 2001;286;1067-74.

iv.     Schattner A. The essence of humanistic medicine.  QJM: An International Journal of Medicine 2020;113; 3-4.

v. Hundert EM, Hafferty F, Christakis D. Characteristics of the informal curriculum and trainees ethical choices.  Acad Med 1996; 71; 624-42.



Challenges to Caregivers in Humanistic Medicine

Patient relations




Doctor-Patient Relationship 

Understand choices available, apply which model is appropriate to each situation and patient.


Role of the doctor

Knowing how to integrate professional demeanor with personal and professional authenticity


Doctor flexibility

Understanding the history of relational expectations, different national and cultural expectations, and how relationship expectations have changed over time, with patient independence emergent, and paternalism in decline


Doctor flexibility

Understanding how to adopt different styles for short-term and long-term patient relationships


Understanding patient needs

Understanding the power of projection, how patients need to feel they are in good hands


Patient variability

Understanding both the commonality of patients, but the differences that culture and finances and other circumstances present


Communication

Knowing how to elicit and communicate information and feelings effectively and sensitively


Emotional distance

Be conscious of what the distance is for each patient and family, know how to be close and available, but still objective, know your own needs and capacities.


Empathy

Know how to be truly empathetic from one’s own experience and practice, and know how to communicate it.


Caring for

Be conscious of and know how to fulfill patient need for emotional support, and for continuing positive monitoring of medical progress and offer guidance.


Boundaries

Understand and adhere to boundaries of patient relations


Power relationship

Understanding the power relations between doctor and patients, and not using it inappropriately


Respect

Treating patients with respect, as a patient with disease, not “the thyroid in 208,” not “a fascinoma”


Navigation of difficulties

Knowing how to handle difficult and provocative patients. Understanding clinician anger when patients don’t fulfill sick role properly.




Severe Disease




Deliver bad news

Knowing how to and when to give bad news, such as a diagnosis of serious disease, returning cancer, untreatable condition.


Caring for seriously ill patients

Knowing how not to shy away from very sick people 


Organizing clinicians

Knowing how to integrate into present care physicians and caregivers who have treated the patient in the past, especially PCPs.  Coordinating specialists with consistent voice for patients


Organizing team care for seriously ill patients

Assigning roles, appreciating all team members, coordinating actions, sharing understanding of actions and goals


Switching from cure to care only

Knowing when to stop treatment and switch to palliative care, involving and listening to the patient and family, but showing leadership


Caring for “incurable” patients 

Knowing what to do when there is nothing to be done, how to be there with the patient


Cooperate with family in terminal disease

Knowing how to comfort families of the dying


Confronting death

Knowing how to process death, the family's feelings and your own - understanding and accepting the natural course of life and death 


Making sense of serious illness

Knowing how to employ narrative medicine to help give share a meaning for the patient’s life


Making sense of serious illness

Knowing how to adapt to belief systems and values of the patient to put life and death in perspective

 

Thursday, January 9, 2025

The Heart of Scientific Progress

It's a little crinkly as a photo, but this is the image of my article, taken from the post a few days ago, as published in the East Bay Times/San Jose Mercury.


 

 


And also the on-line version:

Opinion: The heart of scientific progress beats for all of us

It takes money, time and patience, but constant investment in medical science helps millions of people to thrive

An image from a fluoroscopy shows, to the left of center, two blockages in David Levine's right coronary artery.
(With permission from David Levine)
An image from a fluoroscopy shows, to the left of center, two blockages in David Levine’s right coronary artery.
Author
UPDATED:

I’m in my 80s now, so I remember what life was like in the 1940s and 1950s. In those days, heart attacks hung like the Sword of Damocles.

They took the lives of so many, and few knew what to do about it. Several times, neighbors called my dad, a neurosurgeon, to their houses, only for him to find someone dead in bed. At the news of the death of another friend, Joey, who died at age 39, my parents could only shake their heads.

Philanthropist Mary Lasker and U.S. Sen. Lister Hill of Alabama took the long view. Seeing the health problems that beset America but also seeing the beginnings of medical science progress, in 1955 they persuaded the federal government to vastly expand the National Institutes of Health, targeting research on heart disease, cancer and stroke, the major killers of Americans. Over the following decades, the NIH and other agencies have spent billions of dollars on in-house research and on grants to hospital and university researchers. Amazing progress has ensued, benefiting us all.

Here is one personal example. In early December, my next-door neighbor David Levine, a 71-year-old law professor in apparently good health, felt some discomfort in his upper back. He wisely visited his primary care doctor. Suspicious of a heart problem, she sent him to cardiac stress testing.

The stress testing was abnormal, which led to scheduling an angiogram promptly. As David nervously anticipated his angiogram, I reassured that this is now just routine, the welcome medical situation of “another one of these” rather than the dreaded, “Hmm, this is challenging.”

The angiogram would have seemed otherworldly to my parents’ generation. The cardiology team made a small puncture of David’s right radial artery and threaded a catheter up into his coronary arteries. They were surprised to find that the right anterior descending coronary artery was 90% blocked in two adjacent spots, a very dangerous condition.

They inserted stents and transformed the arteries from 90% blocked to 0% blocked in just a few minutes. David was under waking sedation for the 90-minute procedure, answering questions from the surgical team and watching continuous images of his beating heart on a monitor as they operated.

After the procedure, the interventional cardiologist told David he was only a few months from a heart attack — the 1950s scenario. Instead, just four hours later, David was on his way home to resume his family and professional life. We laughed together at the wonder of it all.

David’s story is repeated daily for people in every walk of life. Did Lasker and Hill dare to imagine this future? We must be grateful to them and to the researchers and practitioners who developed such techniques, the professionals who care for us, and to the leaders who continually invested on behalf of subsequent generations.

Was it too expensive? We can ponder government spending priorities, but as Lasker said, “If you think research is expensive, try disease.” It takes money, time and patience, but look at the results for millions of people.

With a new presidential administration assuming power in Washington, we hope that they honor the vision of Lasker and Hill and keep investing in scientific progress. Let them not be seduced by the vision of headlines trumpeting mindless “efficiency” and claims of “money saved.”

Let’s hope we won’t be led by those who know the price of everything and the value of nothing. What could be of higher value, after all, than what we have just experienced?

Dr. Budd Shenkin is a physician in the East Bay and a graduate of the Goldman School of Public Policy at UC Berkeley, where he is a member of the board of advisers.