Thursday, 11 October 2012

On death, Bill Keller at the NYT gets it wrong again - Maggie's Farm

Keller seems to have written his glowing essay about the Liverpool Protocol, How to Die/>, without talking to any practicing American doctors. He?is writing as?an advocate of Obamacare, and speaks as if American doctors won't let people die?while the English people will.

If he had spoken with American doctors, he would know that most American internists do something very?similar with patients whose condition is hopeless, and do so routinely. Daily. Everybody dies. American hospitals have plenty of patients with "DNR" (Do Not Resusitate) orders on their charts, and hospice units and hospice centers are common in the US.

I see two?exceptions. One is when the family?or patient?is adamant?about "Do anything and everything." These tend to be people who don't know much.?The second is with some?terminal cancer patients. I have seen terminal cancer patients, with widespead metastatic disease in the ICU, dying while the latest cancer chemotherapy is still?being pumped into their veins. It's pitiful.

Generally, doctors know when to give up and do not view death as?an enemy. Unfortunately, Bill Keller seems to be addressing a straw man.

Keller should read this: Why Doctors Die Differently - Careers in medicine have taught them the limits of treatment and the need to plan for the end. Doctors know when they're a goner, and when their patients are too. Most docs do not offer false hope.

Source: http://maggiesfarm.anotherdotcom.com/archives/20750-On-death,-Bill-Keller-at-the-NYT-gets-it-wrong-again.html

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