• A Labor of Love: End-of-Life Support for Young Patients

  • May 18 2023
  • Duración: 29 m
  • Podcast

A Labor of Love: End-of-Life Support for Young Patients  Por  arte de portada

A Labor of Love: End-of-Life Support for Young Patients

  • Resumen

  • Listen to ASCO’s Journal of Clinical Oncology essay, “A Labor of Love” by Dr. Rebecca Kowaloff, a Palliative Care Attending at the University of Massachusetts. The essay is followed by an interview with Kowaloff and host Dr. Lidia Schapira. Kowaloff shares how she connects and supports young patients and families at the end of life. TRANSCRIPT Narrator: A Labor of Love, by Rebecca Kowaloff  I had always thought that I gave too much space for death at the bedside of my patients. More than most of my medical colleagues, I seemed to accept its inevitability and had learned to talk about it, to watch it, and to sit with it. I did not cry, even for the patients robbed in their middle age by cancers sucking their life from within, aging them in hyperspeed before my eyes. Why did the weight not feel heavier to me when so many around me seemed unable to carry it? Despite the frailty of his body when we met, caring for Michael showed me my strength. He was a 25-year-old investment banker on Wall Street when he was diagnosed with a rare sarcoma. I wondered what he was doing the moment that first cell divided. Was he working late, handing a $100 tip to a taxi driver as his father said he sometimes did, or practicing with his college soccer team? Was this disease written into his genetic code when he was traveling the world with his family, smiling with missing teeth on a dock in Egypt in the pictures his father showed me? Did his body know it would have only 29 precious years, making him so generous to strangers, so thoughtful of others, and so eager to experience life and travel the world? I am sure he was full of hopes and dreams that shattered at the moment of his diagnosis. Amid the onslaught of emotions at diagnosis and as various chemotherapy regimens failed him, he started a foundation for sarcoma research to leave a legacy of helping children with similar rare tumors.  Outside the hospital, we would almost have been peers as I was less than 10 years older and could imagine the assumptions he would have had about his life would be similar to my own. Suddenly there was no meeting a life partner, no wedding, and no children. There was no career advancement, no retirement trips, and no new hobbies or interests. There are books that will go unread and current events unexperienced. The world which had been expanding at a spectacular pace suddenly contracts to one person’s orbit: family, close friends, and what dreams can be realized on a shortened timeline in a perhaps newly limited body. He moved from New York City home to his mother’s house, returning, in some ways, to childhood.  His soft-spoken mother listened to my prognostications with grief but not surprise, and my heart ached and eyes welled as I thought how she was watching her baby die. Each night on my drive home, I wept for her. When she saw him walk for the first time, she must have wondered what sports he might play. When he spoke for the first time, she might have wondered what conversations they would have, what speeches he might give, what school plays he might perform, and what songs he might sing. Like me she might have imagined cheering him on in sports, dancing with him at his wedding, and holding his children. She had watched him forge a path onto Wall Street and earn the friendship and respect of teammates on ever more advanced soccer teams. The sadness of her first child leaving home for college had surely receded as he self-actualized into a thoughtful, well-liked, and successful young man. And then came the diagnosis, and she watched all that her son had built slip away, watched him cling to as much normalcy as he could as the sarcoma ate his legs, sank his eyes into his skull, and sucked the color from his still-thick hair.  His father appeared one evening almost a month into his hospital stay with the desperate questions of a parent who has been in such deep denial he had not even told his brothers back home about Michael’s illness. In a power suit, he blubbered that he could not live without his son, his "light," and begged me for fantastical treatments to fix him. In a tiny windowless meditation room, I rode the waves of despair with him. I explained over and over why our best efforts were no match for Michael’s cancer.  Michael and I were practically peers and yet he entrusted me to lead him into this deep dark forest of the unknown, his final journey. Most times when entering his room I thought he had begun to "transition," his eyes half closed, his skin so pale and translucent, and his body so frail. One morning, I sat next to his bed and gently told him he was not improving, his lungs were failing, and I could not, would not, recommend intubation, which seemed imminent. He protested, asserting from behind an oxygen mask that he felt he was improving. He talked about physical therapy and restarting the treatment that had led him to this hospitalization, that had finally failed as he had always known it ...
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