End of Life

Although this is a difficult topic for some to discuss, it is absolutely necessary. As nurses we are subject to seeing more death and dying in one year, maybe even one month, than others will see in a lifetime. I think because of this nurses build up this resiliance to death and dying and in many ways you have to. However, with that being said, it is important to retain your compassion, practice empathy, and always ask yourself how you would want to be treated if you were in that patient’s and family’s shoes?

Death and dying is really nothing new for me and is a conversation that was brought up very early in my engagement to my husband because at that time we were unsure of my mother’s chances of having Huntingtons Disease, as well as my own. I grew up watching the end stages of my grandmother and uncles lives and currently see my aunt’s struggle. The nursing care that my family received from home health nurses inspired me to become a nurse as they were able to bring comfort to my family members in a way I couldn’t. In addition, these experiences with death and dying made me think about how I would like to be cared for and  what interventions to prolong my life I desired. Nursing school has certainly provided me with some insight as well, as I would not want to be stuck in a long-term vent setting for the duration of my life. I think my mother would be the best person to make decisions for me along with a nurse friend who could provide my mother with some insight. My husband is not capable of giving up on anything in his life and certainly not on me, therefore he really wouldn’t be the best person to make health care decisions on my behalf.

I had the conversation again with my family this week asking about what they would want. My husband wants me to allow all possible medical interventions and would never want me to ‘pull the plug’ on him even if they said he was brain dead (even with a nursing student as his wife who was explaining to him that he was indeed dead at this point, he still refused to hear that I would let him go). My mother shares similar thoughts to my husband as she believes a miracle would eventually occur that would reverse these signs of brain death. It is funny how a conversation that is so serious can quickly change into a light-hearted conversation, and I had to ask each of them again in a serious manner to get a real answer in which they both replied that if there were zero signs of life and no possbility of coming back then they would like to be let go.

I continued to discuss end of life care with my mother and we discussed that the above response would be appropriate if this was an acute situation such as a car crash. However, my mother did say that if she were to suffer from a long term degenerative disease such as all her siblings she would not want the g-tube feedings, or any other interventions that would only prolong her mere existance (to which I share a similar view). I was able to finish the conversation by requesting my parents to fill out advance directives which they completed.