Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 10 | Page 20

FEATURE (continued from page 17) or years where others have hours or days. Some have advanced chronic medical problems or advanced age, but they are not dying in the near future. They simply do not wish hospitalizations, procedures or aggressive testing. They often do wish for ongoing common-sense medical care with adjustments in diuretics, treatment of acute infections and adjustments of other medications to optimize their situation. Traditional medicine is coupled with medications to relieve symptoms where warranted. Over time, traditional medications decrease and comfort medications are put in place. Palliative care is a practical approach to health care, letting go of the emphasis on prevention and focusing instead on the acute issues. I evolved from an internist in an office to a champion of palliative care. My personal story has been a piece of that evolution because I experienced on a visceral level the burdens of treatment and the value of compassion. Upon completion of my internal medicine residency, I moved to a small town in central Louisiana to fulfill an Air Force obligation. I had an Air Force scholarship for medical school. My base was deployed to Saudi Arabia just after I arrived, and I was one of a few practitioners left behind. For this reason, when I, a physically fit distance runner, became acutely short of breath over a few days, I read my own chest x-ray. I found a large anterior mediastinal mass. Due to limited resources on the base, I ended up at the local hospital for acute treatment. I went in for a biopsy, expecting a diagnosis of lymphoma and radiation therapy. I woke up on a ventilator with chest and mediastinal tubes, having had the mass resected. I ultimately was diagnosed with high grade non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. During my immediate post-op recovery, I was treated as if I were drug seeking because I wanted 5mg of percocet q4 hours. I had numerous CAT scans along the way. The oral contrast made me so nauseated that even 27 years later, I still experience nausea at the thought of it. High-dose prednisone was part of my treatment; I recall vividly the profound akithesia it caused. I was not warned about what to expect. My worst memory was acute delirium brought on by Vincristine neuritis. Unfortunately, even though I was a physician, my physicians did not always explain what was happening or what to expect. I’m sure at times I was too ill to really understand or focus. I was very lucky that I had a highly curable disease. From this experience, I took away a great appreciation of the value of compassion and honest information. I also gained awareness that what may seem like a simple test or procedure to a physician may be quite a burden to a frail and depleted patient. This episode in my life caused me to rethink how to treat people who are vulnerable and scared. Compassionate care matters. Thinking about every test, procedure or treatment we order, and what we expect the patient to gain from them matters. If a test will not change the plan, then why do it? When a medication is the twentieth or thirtieth pill a 18 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE patient will take in a day, perhaps we should ask ourselves how we think it will benefit the patient. If a frail and declining patient has an acute event that theoretically requires a surgical procedure, it is important to question whether the procedure will actually benefit that particular patient. Really looking at an individual from the point of view of cognitive and physical function, interaction, engagement and recent level of function should factor in any decision tree. Patients and families appreciate honesty about whether a particular intervention is likely to be beneficial. What decline and dying look like are very apparent to palliative physicians, but perhaps not to all physicians. This, of course, factors into what tests or procedures make sense. In palliative care, we work hard to find the history of decline or how an individual has been doing. We observe looking for engagement or withdrawal, intake, recent weight loss, frequency of falls and cognition. How a person is doing is not a CT scan result or lab, it is truly how are they doing. Do they lie in bed 24 hours per day? Do they get dressed or put on makeup? Do they stare through you or make eye contact? Are they restless or delusional? How does current behavior relate to baseline personality? These things take a minute to elucidate but taking the time may save a patient from an expensive, burdensome and futile procedure or medication. Every broken hip does not benefit from surgery, and every bradyarrhythmia does not require a pacemaker. Many patients and families want to “allow natural death,” but sometimes we get too caught up in the pathology before us to see the individual and ask the questions. This is the focus of palliative care. I often say, “Comfort care is not just an order in a chart.” Just knowing how to write a morphine order does not make a palliative physician. Palliative care is intensive care of vulnerable, frail people facing terminal or life-limiting medical conditions. It requires time, conversation and ongoing assessment and adjustments in medication and care. Medication to control symptoms is one facet and withdrawal of medication that is no longer beneficial is another. Hospice care and care of the actively dying are a piece of palliative care, and so is the care of individuals with moderate to moderately advanced dementia or other neurodegenerative diseases, or chronic lung, heart or liver disease who are still out and about but who wish to allow natural death without pursuing aggressive treatment. Palliative care is the specialty meant to serve as a balance to our specialty-oriented health care system. It is both emotionally and time intensive as well as profoundly rewarding. Dr. Cornett is the owner of Louisville Palliative Care LLC and is board certified in internal medicine and palliative care.