300 likes | 578 Views
Is there any meaning in life that the inevitability of death does not negate?" -The Death of Ivan Ilych. What is Death?. physical end anxiety-producing threat to existencetransformationpunishmentreckoningreliefinevitable. Dying is a Sacred Art. The final ritualLast chance to find meaning/pu
E N D
1. The Nuts and Bolts of Dying
2. “Is there any meaning in life that the inevitability of death does not negate?”-The Death of Ivan Ilych
3. What is Death? physical end
anxiety-producing threat to existence
transformation
punishment
reckoning
relief
inevitable
4. Dying is a Sacred Art The final ritual
Last chance to find meaning/purpose
Marking of path
What does it mean to be “ready” to die?
Convictions about the process
Practical methods for sacred passage
5. Diagnosis: The Beginning shock, disbelief, missing details
“chemo brain”
shift in consciousness
many options in response
planning
paralysis/inertia
6. Remember… you are choosing to snuggle up
abnormal in living is normal in dying
body is preparing itself to stop
simultaneous shifts in consciousness
7. Recommendations from the medical perspective Alleviate physical and emotional symptoms
Support function/autonomy to preserve dignity
Guard against inappropriate aggressive care
Make time spent EOL precious
Ensure QOL
Minimize financial burdens
Educate patients about insurance limitations
Help the family with bereavement
8. ACS says… Pain
Fatigue
Constipation
Dyspnea
Nausea & vomiting
Sleep disturbances Depression
Anxiety
Confusion
Restlessness
Anorexia/cachexia
9. Causes of Pain in Terminal Cancer bone mets
neuropathic pain
neurological pain
psychosocial pain
constipation
decubitous ulcers
and more
10. Pain Management Thorough and consistent assessment
‘round the clock treatment
Dispell myths of addiction
Teach and encourage reporting of side effects
Heat, cold, massage, relaxation, distraction
11. Causes of Constipation in Terminal Cancer opioids
immobility
altered nutrition
chemo
iron supplements
bowel obstruction
12. Dyspnea increasing tumor size/lung mets
comorbidities
pleural effusion
pain or fatigue
anxiety
13. Dyspnea Management Pursed lip breathing
Use of can or open window for facial cooling
Frequent mouth care
Humidified oxygen
Elevate head of bed
14. Nausea and Vomiting electrolyte imbalances (hypercalcemia, etc)
bowel obstruction
brain mets
visceral distention
altered taste
gastric stasis
15. Stages of Dying not all pts go through all stages
stages vary in length
predictions are guidelines
mind/body/spirit can affect process
nothing to “do”
16. “Pre-active” and “Active” Dying Pre-active
lasts roughly 2 weeks
more aware
organs function
swelling begins
acknowledge dying
“unfinished business”
slow or non-healing Active
lasts about 3 days
generally not aware
very minimal function
swelling persists
settles into dying
abnormal breathing
hallucinations
17. Pre-active Dying restlessness, confusion, agitation
inability to be made comfortable
withdrawal from social interaction
increased sleep/lethargy
increased apnea
decreased intake
states that he/she is dying
seeing people who have died
tying up “loose ends”
inability to heal wounds
swelling in extremities
18. Active Dying coma-like
severe agitation
departure from normal personality
longer apnea
respiratory congestion/fluid “death rattle”
states that he/she will die
cyanosis
stiffening/frozen not taking any food by mouth
can’t speak even if awake
open mouth
incontinence
dark urine
dramatic BP drop
cold extremities
complains can’t feel feet/hands
19. Terminal Agitation subtle signals from the body
(basic physiology)
intuition
“knowing”
20. Terminal Agitation panic
sweating
muttering
concern with details
questions
reassurance
repeating
21. What does it look like? demand to move/transfer
complaints of discomfort
accusations/yelling out
hallucinations/stories
may not recognize others
speak quickly/disconnected
repetitive actions
shuddering limbs
22. Why? hypoxia
decreased brain circulation
metabolic changes
things we can’t measure
23. Terminal Agitation Steps
Are all sx are addressed?
pain
breathing
bedding
comfort
(if pain, sedative will not help; pain med can alleviate agitation if pain is cause)
25. Non-pharmaceutical Options Alpha and theta-wave entrainment
Christian monastic death prep music
Bio-energy interventions
Reiki, Healing Touch, Quantum Touch
Guided visualization, prayer, meditation
Aromatherapy
anxiety, confusion, pain relief, breathlesness
Gentle massage
hands, feet, brow and head, ears
Environment of quiet and serenity
low light, no TV, slow approach, co-breathing
Soothing tone of voice
Hand holding
under the hand
26. Breakdown Begins Muscles in organs relax
Decreased blood flow/oxygenation
kidneys, liver and pancreas first
Heart and lungs are focus
heat in trunk and upper body
arms and legs grow cold
27. Breakdown Continues kidneys decrease urine output
liver does not process as much waste
overall capacity of major organs
blood PH shifts (toxicity)
circulation decreases
sleeping increases (patterns like infancy)
*current medical thinking suggests that artificial nutrition and hydration actually make the process of dying more uncomfortable
28. The person dies.
29. sit down.ritual bathing?family sharing?What’s here?
30. What is rigor mortis? body-wide stiffening
facial muscles affected first
within 10 minutes to a few hours of death
Maximum rigidity at 12-24 hours
lasts about 72 hours
31. Rigor Mortis muscle membranes become more permeable to calcium
living muscle uses energy to transport calcium to the outside of the cells
calcium promotes the actin/myosin bridge
contraction results
ATP stores are used up
actin and myosin remain linked until decomposition begins