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Identifying “Harm” in Palliative Care
…when death is the
anticipated outcome
Dr David MacKintosh, Senior Staff Specialist, Central Coast Palliative Care Service, NSW
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 2013
Case…
• AB - 73 year old woman• Chronic airways disease – emphysema• Cancer of the kidney• Admitted to a hospice at family’s request – acutely
unwell (2 days) –capacity lost• Family requested no active management• Hospice staff agreed• AB died peacefully four days later• Family grateful for care• Hospice staff – job well done
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20132
Has AB been harmed?
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20133
Patient Safety?
• ‘freedom from accidental or preventable injury produced by medical care’– ‘How do I harm thee? Let me count the ways.’
– Drug adverse effects– Chopping off the wrong leg– Untimely death
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20134
Patient Safety?
• Medline 2012 – ‘Patient Safety' – All disciplines - 1694 citations– Palliative Care - 5 citations
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20135
Untimely death
• Curative medicine– You need a very good excuse
• Palliative care ‘cultural’ perspective– Death normalised– The Death Denying Society
• Does PC need a good excuse?• Are rules of clinical governance different?
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20136
For our purposes, ‘harm’ is…
• A circumstance which causes a person to be in a bad state– Non-comparative (badness is bad in itself)
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20137
Harm is always bad, but…
• Magnitude – degrees of badness• Constipation vs Death
• Mitigation available – still bad, but…• ‘all things considered…’ e.g. death as release from
unbearble suffering
…despite mitigation…
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20138
…but, …despite mitigation…
• Harm still exists: ‘harm as fact’• Has magnitude but is not amenable to mitigation
• Harm experienced: ‘lived harm’• Has magnitude, is amenable to mitigation
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 20139
For our purposes dying is:
• The period of life during which the processes which maintain life begin to fail irreversibly– Hours to days
• Not applicable where death is anticipated but not imminent– Weeks to months (Pre-dying)
• He was sick and was going to die anyway
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201310
For our purposes death is:
• Death1- Moment of irreversible cessation of life
or
• Death2- The continuing state following irreversible cessation of life
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201311
Death as harm…
• Loss of a portion of a life that would otherwise have been lived
• Epicurus (341 BC to 270 BC) – ‘Death is nothing to us’ (Letter to Menoeceus)
• Death2… the state of being dead, NOT loss of life lived
• Curative medicine - ultimate harm
• Palliative care - ? Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201312
Death as harm…
• Any circumstance that leads to a reduction in life lived can be considered to be a harm (‘harm as fact’)
• Mitigation through an all things considered approach (e.g. burden vs benefit) may reduce the magnitude of the harm of death (‘lived harm’) but does not remove it
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201313
Was AB harmed?
• AB - 73 year old woman• Chronic airways disease – emphysema • Cancer of the kidney• Admitted to a hospice at family’s request – acutely
unwell (2 days) –capacity lost• Family requested no active management• Hospice staff agreed• AB died peacefully four days later• Family grateful for care• Hospice staff – job well done
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201314
AB…
• The rest of the story…• Emphysema - No recent admissions to hospital
(Predying)• Extent of the cancer unknown (Predying)• Interesting lifestyle – burdensome for husband /
family• Respite admission to hospice in week prior to final
illness– Subsequent death unexpected, unanticipatable
• Acutely unwell for only 2 days prior to admission
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201315
Right Time? – Right Reason?
• Would AB have died from one of her diseases?– Probably; eventually
• Did she die from one of her diseases?– Probably not
• What did she die from?– We don’t know
• Possibly urinary sepsis – potentially treatable
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201316
Possible harmsA circumstance which causes a person to be in a bad state
• Loss of a portion of life that would otherwise have been lived – Untimely death
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201317
Contributing harmsA circumstance which causes a person to be in a bad state
• Deprivation of access to adequate assessment and treatment that may have mitigated that loss– As a result of
• Subordination of AB’s interests to– Substitute decision makers’ interests – release from
burden of care– Obiesance to Palliative Care / Hospice Perspective
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201318
Conflicting needs
• Substitute decision makers interests– What constraints if any can / should be
imposed on substitute decision makers?
• Palliative Care / Hospice perspective– What is its place?
• Normalisation of death• The struggle against Death Denial
– Is it any of their business?
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201319
Mitigating circumstances
• None known
• Suggestions please
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201320
Restitution available
• None
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201321
?
• For possible harms– Do such harms exist?
Should we care about them?Can we do anything about them?Should we do anything about them?
Australasian Association of Bioethics and Health Law, Sydney, 201322