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Explore reasons for death across ages, palliative care, grieving, and societal approaches to death. Learn about various age groups' experiences with death, including infants, children, teens, middle-aged, and older adults.
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Dying and BereavementJennifer Thake MA MA PhD RP CCCjthake@terracewellness.com
Tonight’s talk • Brief look at reasons for death across the lifespan • Where might we spend our palliative time • The person who is dying • The person who is preparing to grieve • The person who is grieving
Death across the lifespan • Miscarriage & Still-birth • Infant • Child • Teen/young adult • Middle age • Older adults
Death across the lifespan: Miscarriage & Still birth • Changes in the way that our society approaches miscarriage & still-births • Obvious in social media • Recognition of a life • Practice of remembrance
Remembrance • “Now I lay me down to sleep” • Remembrance photography to parents suffering the loss of a baby • Important step in the family’s healing process by honoring the child’s legacy
Death across the lifespan: Infants <1st year of life: sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) • 3 babies die each week in Canada • Causes not entirely known • more likely in low socio-economic status, with mother who smoked, baby sleeps on stomach or side • Enormous psychological toll on parents (confusion, self-blame, suspicion from others)
SIDS Intervention • Sleeping position has now been reliably related to SIDS • Health Canada, Canadian Institute of Child Health, Back to Sleep campaign • 50% reduction in SIDS • 40% to now 70% of parents putting infants on back
Death Across the Lifespan: Children • After 1st year (under 15 yrs) • External causes: motor vehicle accidents, accidental drowning, poisoning, injuries, falls (accounts for 42% of all deaths in this group) • Parent: blaming themselves, legal complications
Death Across the Lifespan: Teens/Young Adults • Although the death rate in adolescents is low, the major cause of death is uunintentional injury, mainly involving automobiles • Followed by suicide, cancer, and homicide • After death of a child, considered most tragic: Waste of life/robbed of the chance to mature and develop
Death Across the Lifespan: Middle Age • “Premature death”: before projected 82 years • 100 yrs. ago – infectious diseases (tuberculosis, influenza, and pneumonia) • Decreased due to public health & preventative medical technologies • Now: chronic illness (cancer, heart disease, stroke) • Know what we will die from 5, 10 or more years beforehand
The part we play • “Infectious diseases are no longer killing us…we are now killing ourselves.” • Lifestyle/behaviour has a significant effects on chronic diseases • Examples: Smoking, sedentary lifestyle, substance abuse
How influential are lifestyle factors? Belloc & Breslow (1972) Participants: 7000 adults; ranging from 20 to 75 yrs 2 sets of questions • Health in the past 12 months • 7 aspects of current lifestyle • At each age, health is better as lifestyle improved • Health of those older adults who followed all 7 practices was about the same as those 30 yrs younger who followed few or none
7 Aspects of Lifestyle • ___ sleeping 7-8 hours/day • ___ eating breakfast almost everyday • ___ rarely eat between meals • ___ near appropriate weight for height • ___ never smoke cigarettes • ___ rarely/moderately drink alcohol • ___ regularly get vigorous physical exercise
How influential are lifestyle factors? Breslow (1983) – longitudinal • 9.5 years later • In each age group, dying decreased as health behaviours increased • Impact greater for older than younger, especially for males Conclusion: behaviour matters
Death Across the Lifespan: Middle Age • Cancer (malignant tumours) and heart disease were the two leading causes of death in 2016 (Stats Can) • Contributors of heart disease • Behavioural factors (e.g., physical inactivity, smoking, substance use) • Family history & genetics • Environmental factors (e.g., averse childhood events – neglect, abuse, violence – chronic stress)
Death Across the Lifespan: Middle age • Fear of death most prominent • Why fearful? • Clear bodily signs (physical appearance, sexual prowess, athletic ability) • Begin to develop the health problem that may ultimately kill them • Seeing the death of others • Meaninglessness – youthful ambitions never realized
Death Across the Lifespan: Middle Age Having preferences • Quick and relatively painless; • Avoiding deterioration; • kinder to family members Downfalls: • No exit prep; • Financial impact on family; • Estrangement with no reconciliation
Death Across the Lifespan: Old Age • Dying not easy at any point in the lifespan; however, it seems to become less difficult as people progress from middle age to old age • Main causes: • Degenerative diseases (cancer, stroke, heart failure) • General physical decline which predisposes one to infectious disease and organ failure • Terminal illness is shorter (more biological competitors)
Death Across the Lifespan: Old Age More prepared: • thought about it • made initial preparations • observed the death of close others • have come to terms with issues surrounding death like loss of appearance or non-fulfillment of goals • often express readiness • show withdrawal due to lower energy (grandma – “no xmas decorations”)
Döstädning (the death purge) Swedish cultural tradition • "It's what people are doing before somebody passes away so that the relatives don't get left with the big chore of sorting out their personal things.“ • Swedes start doing when they reach middle age — sometimes even sooner • It involves giving unwanted items to family and friends
Living Longer: Dying in your 70s vs. 90s? • Psychological distress predicts declines in health and even increased mortality in older age • For men, much of the association between distress and mortality can be accounted for by socio-demographic differences (chronic disease, lower education, widowhood) • For women, the link between distress and risk of death persists even after accounting for these factors
Women Live 4 Years Longer. Why? • Women live an average of 4 years longer than men (women 84, men 80) • Women biologically more fit (male > female fetuses, but male death rate higher at all ages; genetic, hormonal?) • Men engage in more risky behaviours ((jobs, substance use, cope with stress thru fight (aggression) or flight (social withdrawal, drugs, alcohol)) • Social support more protective for women (stress response)
Advancing illness • Brings the need for continued treatments with debilitating and unpleasant side effects • Question about continuing treatments • Refusal of treatment may indicate depression and hopelessness or it may be a thoughtful choice
Palliative Care • Once deemed terminal, then palliative care • Main goals of palliative care: • manage pain and other symptoms; • providing social, psychological, cultural, emotional, spiritual and practical support; • supporting caregivers; and • providing support for bereavement (Health Canada, 2009) • Often covered by provincial health care plans
Palliative Care • Relatively successful: Improved quality of life, reduced anxiety/depression, high survival rates vs. solely medical care • Temel et al (2010) • Newly diagnosed metastatic lung cancer • 2 conditions (over 12 wks): • Standard oncologic care (e.g., chemotherapy) • Oncologic care + palliative care (met with a palliative care nurse or doctor on a monthly basis)
Palliative Care Results • Those who received earlier palliative care were less likely to experience depression and anxiety during the 12 weeks • Higher survival rates were shown in the palliative care group, indicating that this type of care can add weeks or months to life
Palliative Care in Hospital or Nursing Home • Most people in developed nations die in hospitals or nursing homes (NCHS) • Hospitals – expertise, technical equipment, and efficient caregiving, but usually not “psychologically comfortable” • Death in the institutional setting can be depersonalized and fragmented • unfamiliar environment & people, • understaffed, • under-medicated, • low support, • low control
Patients’ View of Hospital Staff • Very significant, great dependence (e.g., turning over in bed, pain management) • Only people they see on a regular basis • Patients’ only source of realistic information • Know the patients’ true feelings • Abandoned by doctor (?)
Alternatives: Hospice Care • Dying should be in a place of choice • Maximize their potential – perform to the limits of their physical, cognitive and social potential • Address all family members’ needs – may involve resolving interpersonal discord, and feelings of anxiety, guilt, and depression • Follow-up care – available for family members to receive help through and after the period of bereavement
Hospice Care • Currently 62% of annual deaths in Canada will require hospice services • Comfort is stressed: Personalize living areas, wear their own clothes, determine their own activities • Staff are specially trained to interact with patients in a warm, caring way • Therapist are available; volunteers that provide support
Hospice Care Evaluation: show palliative care on par with hospitals, although more emotionally satisfying care for both patients and their families (Casarett, 2005)
The Diane Morrison Hospice • Partnership between The Ottawa Mission and Ottawa Inner City Health • Palliative care to 14 terminally ill people who are homeless or street involved • The intent of the Hospice program is to provide a safe home where people can live well for their remaining days and die pain-free and with dignity
Alternatives: Home Care • Whether it is a reasonable alternative depends on condition and quality of care available at home • Similar benefits to hospice • Can receive good care if they have regular contact with medical team, aides and trained family (AMA) • Many do not have the option: Lack family members who can provide care or financial resources
Alternatives: Home Care Considerations • Very stressful for the family: • Family must be adequately trained (the “only ones”); • Full-time care; • Constant contact with someone who is dying; and • Ambivalent about patient death • Caregivers cope best if: caregiver security (financial), good patient relationship, feel appreciated • Despite stressors, families often prefer home to hospital care
Right to Die • Right to die movement: Death should be a personal choice with personal control • Medical assistance in dying (MAID) - June 2016 (ban was deemed unconstitutional)
Right to Die • Are their psychosocial issues underlying the desire to end one’s life early? • Possibility that MAID may result from unmet needs (e.g., comprehensive hospice & quality care) rather than a genuine choice
Right to Die Research: • Patients main reason for choosing an early death was: • decreased ability to participate in pleasurable activities, • loss of autonomy, and • loss of dignity (Niemeyer; Chochinov) • More likely among divorced or never married (Niemeyer)
Right to Die: Continued discussion • Even if assessed and approved for MAID must give consent a second time right before undergoing the life-ending procedure • Leading some to consider ending their lives earlier due to fear of losing capacity to consent • Provision of “advanced consent” – specifications of exactly what would be considered intolerable (e.g., inability to recognize family)
Dying with Dignity: More Passive Measure Living Wills • Developed after diagnosis with a terminal illness • “Extraordinary life-sustaining procedures” not be used • Patients’ preferences, rather than the surrogates, are respected • Not completely successful (e.g., not indicated on charts) • Complex due to big changes in health care (e.g., renal dialysis, nutritional support & hydration, mechanical ventilation, organ transplants)
Terminal Illness Research in ON with advanced lung or gastro cancer – expected survival < 2 years Issues on their mind: • Issues surrounding control over dying, • Valuing the present moment, and • Creating a living legacy
What would you describe as being elements of a “good death”?
Good Death • Defined as: “one that is free from avoidable suffering for patients, families and caregivers in general accordance with the patients’ and families’ wishes”
Good Death • Pain and symptom management/comfort • Clear decision making • Preparation for death • Sense of completion • Having had contributed to others • Affirmation of the whole person • Not being a burden to others • Having a sense of control • Psychological comfort • Spiritual comfort
Terminal Illness: Self concept changes • Continually adjust expectations and activities • Threatening to the self-concept & dignity • Becomes difficult to maintain control of biological functioning (e.g., incontinence; drool; distorted facial expressions.) • Cognitive decline – mental regression, inability to concentrate (progressive nature of disease or painkillers, etc.) • Loss of physical and mental function can threaten social interactions
Terminal Illness: Social factors • Often want and need social contact • Reasons for withdrawal: • Fears that obvious mental and physical deterioration will upset others; • Fear of becoming an burden; • Bitterness over death and resentment of the living; • Disengagement as part of a normal grieving process
Terminal Illness: Communication Breakdown • When prognosis is favourable, communication is usually open • As the prognosis worsens, communication can breakdown • Makes sense: Death is a taboo topic • Often believe the “proper thing” is not to bring it up • Family may be “cheerfully optimistic” but actually confused and frightened • All believing that others do not want to talk about it
Communicating your Wishes Let loved ones know (in advance): • What you expect of your family/friends during terminal times (living situation, visit frequency, holidays, etc.) • All the practicalities for post-death – location and status of all important documents etc. • E.g., story about having a 2 files on computer
Communicating your Wishes Let loved ones know (in advance): • Funeral, body, ceremony? • Natural burial; cremation; celebration, etc. • What do you want said, who do you want to say it • What legacy is important to you (e.g., good china) • How you want to be remembered (images, stories, sayings) • About you, if possible – dignity therapy