Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Universal

There's much debate ongoing in the healthcare-for-all arena these days. I won't weigh in politically, however, I'd like to share this story:

Kathy had a terrible childhood. You'd expect this if you had to watch your mother die of cancer when you were 8 years old. Kathy and her brothers got even more bad news as they grew. The cancer their mom had died with was inherited. Their family had a condition that put them at tremendous risk for getting the same cancer. It wasn't until Kathy's older brother was diagnosed and died at age 25 that the reality of this all sank in for her.
Kathy, a teenager when her brother died, made 2 related vows. She was not going to die of this cancer, and she was not ever going to leave children "motherless" like her own mom did. Still on her father's health insurance Kathy began the suggested annual screens needed to watch for this cancer.

Years went by and many things happened; Kathy got married, had 3 kids and then divorced. In her late 20's she found herself a single mom, working odd jobs to support her family, and no way to pay for her own health insurance. As they, say she was the working poor.

And what stopped? Those annual screens. Unlike clinics that offer free mammograms and blood tests, Kathy needed an invasive screen that no one provides "free".
In her 30's Kathy met Allen. They fell in love, married and quickly got pregnant. Kathy was delighted to again have health insurance through Allen and quickly made arrangements to begin the screening.

You will already know where this is headed. I can't imagine being told that I had cancer. For Kathy it was even more gut wrenching, she knew she would probably get it, and yet hadn't had the means to catch it early and possibly cure it. The vows she had made as a teenager would all be broken, and although Kathy fought through chemo and surgeries for 2 years, she did not win the fight. At the young age of 36, her life was over.

I met the new generation, the 11 year old, the 9 year old, the 6 year old who had her birthday 3 days before her mom died, and the little 2 year old. I wonder if they will be making vows themselves, and I wonder if they will live in a society with insurance that will allow them to put and end to their cancer cycle.


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Borderline

If you have borderline personality disorder, please try really hard not to get an aggressive cancer.  The combination of the love/hate, push/pull personality doesn't do well with the rapid changes that come from say, ovarian cancer or pancreas cancer.

I recently took care of a woman in this situation. She'd opted not to pursue chemotherapy for her advanced cancer, but also seemed determined to feel good despite not wanting any medications.  Our daily conversations went something like this:

"Ms. Fraz, how are you this morning?"
"Miserable. Horrible. Awful", she’d say with her disheveled hair, eyes half open, and wrinkles cemented on her face from constant frowning.
"Oh?" Feigning surprise, though this was the 4th day in a row she'd said this, "What specifically is bothering you?"
"I'm vomiting, I'm in pain, and I'm so tired" were her general complaints.
To this I reminded her, "You know, Ms. Fraz, you haven't allowed us to give you any medication to help"
Her reply in full whine now, "But I don't like how medicine makes me feel" pause, "What are you going to do to fix me?"

And this is the crux of such a personality. She wanted someone else to fix her and to bare responsibility for her misfortune.

What makes borderline’s even more difficult in terminal illness is that they usually don’t have a lot of healthy relational support. 

Ms. Fraz, in fact, had only one single person as her friend. No family…no other human relation. More tragic, the one friend she did have, Bill, was adamantly apposed to her decision not to pursue chemotherapy.  He would tell her daily that she would be going to Hell for not trying to cure herself. “It’s like suicide to not try for a cure”.  He’d badger and bemoan her and she’d cry and get distressed. She’d demand he leave, and then call him back for more.

She was aware that when she lost the ability to make decisions herself, he would be in charge. She had given him that power legally, even acknowledging that he would probably choose things she didn’t want.

And so she spent her time dying of cancer, wanting to feel better, but refusing the help we offered. It was in this pitiful state of inertia that she continued to pull Bill in, to listen to his rants about her mistakes and damnation until finally she weakened and he won. Back to the hospital she went from hospice, to spend her last days hooked up to machines and IV’s, getting poked and prodded, pushed and pulled.  A perfect borderline personality metaphor; dying in the same way she lived.