In July 2003, a few days after I had started service as inpatient attending pediatric cardiologist at Lutheran General Children’s Hospital, the neonatologists, nurses and I met with Jenni and Tony to discuss their daughter Grace’s health status.
Grace, now two and a half weeks old, had seemed normal at birth. After a few hours, her skin color had turned blue: Her oxygen level was dangerously low. She’d been whisked off to the neonatal intensive-care unit (NICU), where tests showed that her heart function was poor due to high blood pressure in her lungs. Her heart and lungs began to fail, so we’d placed her on a heart-lung machine (ECMO) for sixteen days. Now taken off the machine, she was breathing with the help of a ventilator. I was relieved to see that her heart function had finally improved.
Despite her progress, though, Grace was still quite sick, and her prognosis was uncertain. I knew that my colleagues shared my apprehensions.
As we gathered around a large conference-room table, the room was quiet, except for the faint buzzing of an overhead florescent light.
Grace’s parents seemed nervous, but quietly confident. Jenni pushed back her blond locks, smiled and looked expectantly at us. Tony seemed almost joyful.
“It’s amazing how far Grace has come,” he said. “We’re excited she’s off ECMO! She’s so strong, even with everything she’s been through. She’s going to make it. Grace is a fighter, just like her mom!”
He tenderly stroked Jenni’s hand under the table.
“Tony’s right,” she said, nodding. “I felt her tiny hand squeezing my finger, and I can’t believe how strong her grip is. Grace is going to get through this.”
She and Tony were both schoolteachers; I could easily imagine their students eagerly soaking up their compassionate energy.
As both parents beamed, I felt I could almost read their minds: They knew their daughter would be okay.
Now it was time for the medical team to weigh in.
“Grace has come a long way,” said the neonatology fellow in her serious, staccato voice. “But she’s still really sick, so it’s important to remember that she might not survive.”
“We’ve taken care of lots of children like Grace,” her nurse added. “You need to expect a long road ahead, with no guarantees that she’s going to be able to go home.”
The attending neonatologist spoke next: “We’re doing everything we can,” he said, “but unfortunately, many kids as sick as Grace don’t make it.”
While the team talked, I looked at Jenni and Tony. With each comment, their smiles faded a bit.
Tony’s ruddy cheeks turned pale, and he began to scowl. Jenni’s eyes grew teary, and her shoulders slumped. She stared toward the far corner of the room, avoiding everyone’s gaze.
Except for the buzzing of the light overhead, the room was quiet. Everyone in the room was looking at me—presumably for more words of caution.
Seeing Grace’s parents’ despair, I felt fury welling up deep inside—fury at my colleagues. Was their negativity completely called for? It seemed to me that in trying to keep Grace’s parents from harboring unrealistic expectations, they’d overemphasized the risk that she might not survive.
My heart started to pound. My mouth was dry. I remembered something my mentor, Dr. Welton Gersony, taught me in fellowship:
“Once you tell a family their child might die, you never have to bring that up again. No parent will forget that. Some medical people are so concerned about ‘telling the truth,’ they destroy hope. Don’t do that, unless there really is no hope.”
But how to balance these two truths? With parents whose child was facing a life-threatening illness, what words could I use to acknowledge the truth while also keeping the right amount of hope alive?
Suddenly a powerful calm came over me—something that felt to me like what Christians call “the peace that passes all understanding.” I knew what I had to say.
“Grace is sick,” I said gently. “I’ve taken care of similar kids who have died, so that still might happen.”
Tony and Jenni stared up at the ceiling, looking like they wanted to get this discussion over with.
“However,” I continued, “I think it’s important to remember that there is a chance Grace might live. I’ve taken care of kids like Grace, some even sicker, who survived. Grace might get through this and make it out of the NICU.”
I looked at Jenni and Tony. Their eyes met mine. Jenni’s eyes were red. Tony’s lips were quivering, but the color had returned to his cheeks.
He looked directly at me. “What’s your honest opinion? Is Grace going to make it?”
“I don’t know what’s going to happen,” I said. “I do know I’m going to do everything I can to help Grace have a good outcome. Each of us has a role to play: the nurses, the respiratory therapists, the doctors, the social workers, the chaplains–and especially her mom and dad.”
“But how?” Jenni asked. “What can we do?”
“What you’re already doing,” I said. “Show up, love her, touch her, sing to her, tell her you love her. Kids who are loved do so much better than kids who are ignored. If I were in her position, I would want to be loved by my mommy and daddy. Keep loving her.”
Tony smiled.
“We can do that,” he said. Jenni nodded and squeezed his hand.
After the meeting, I stopped by Grace’s bedside. She was hooked up to multiple EKG leads, a temperature monitor, a ventilator and a pulse oximeter. From time to time, she stretched her little arms and legs. The only sounds were the steady beep, beep, beep of the pulse oximeter and the intermittent whoosh of the ventilator. Tony and Jenni sat close beside her bed, looking exhausted but in love with their baby.
I pulled up a chair next to them.
“How are you doing after our meeting?” I asked.
“What you said was so important,” Tony answered. “You gave us hope.”
“Now we don’t feel so alone,” Jenni added. “Thank you.”
After that, it felt to me like we’d become a team, guiding Grace’s care. The three of us had come through the stressful conference knowing more clearly than ever that we’d all work together to help Grace have the best possible outcome.
After three months in the NICU, Grace was weaned off the ventilator. At four months of age, she was able to go home with oxygen, and by eighteen months she was weaned off oxygen.
Caring for critically ill children, as I do, I must often try to strike the right balance between optimism and realism—for myself, my colleagues, my patients and their families. Grace and her parents taught me something important in this regard; something along the lines of the serenity prayer. I try to accept the things I cannot change (sometimes people are quite sick) but try to find the courage to change the things I can (doing my best, and trying not to fight families in the hope arena).
Thanks to Grace and her parents, I’m a better doctor, a better advocate and a “realistic cheerleader” for my patients and their families during challenging situations.
On a sunny spring day, eighteen years after we’d first met, an envelope from Jenni and Tony arrived in the mail. Inside was an invitation to Grace’s high-school graduation. Reading it through moist eyes, I recalled our long-ago conference.
Jenni and Tony were right, I thought. They were young, with no medical training—but they were right all along.
Grace was going to make it.
14 thoughts on “Lessons From My Teachers”
Dr. Thoele,
Thank you for this essay. I was brought to tears for this family. It also bought back the emotions of sitting in the chair next to my daughter and son-in law with a medical team for my newborn granddaughter. The diagnosis was different, but the circumstances around the table were identical to this essay. It was so out of our realm of understanding so unusual that we could not even comprehend all the chatter. We did not have an individual with your insight to advocate the HOPE that you were able to provide at the table we sat at.
My daughter does give lectures to new residents and various staff members to tell their story and to be a light at of HOPE at the table to the family.
I thank you for your continued efforts to help each and every family by providing them with the care that not only encompasses the medical diagnosis but extends to the hearts and soul of each family. Your positive persona and the eagerness to assist, support and encourage all those that come before you are truly a blessing to observe.
Dr. Thoele,
Thank you for sharing your story. You are an inspiration to many so keep sharing your words and wisdom.
Honesty and hope and presence. Thank you.
Dave- Empathy should not be so rare in the practice of medicine. For some reason, medical schools think they can train students to become empathetic. After almost forty years as a pediatrician, I would disagree. Instead, empathy reflects one’s upbringing. Love and understanding build it. Winning at all costs (eg. the cutthroat competition to get into med school) destroys it.
It was all in how you said it differently from the neonatologist, and your empathy. Once hope is gone, despair is what’s left.
I am literally crying right now. What a wonderful story! Thank you for your sensitivity. I wish there were more healthcare professionals as wise as you are.
David,
Thanks for a wonderful, thoughtful essay. As a retired physician, I was frequently surprised when people failed to hear what I told them, so I probably leaned toward repetition. As a parent and grandparent, though, I can only imagine the truth implicit in, “Once you tell a family their child might die, you never have to bring that up again. No parent will forget that.”
Over the years, I attempted to share difficult news with as much honest compassion as I could muster, leaving plenty of time for quiet and questions. As the preacher Warren Wiersbe once wrote: “Truth without love is brutality, and love without truth is hypocrisy.” I felt I owed my patients that.
Yes.
Thanks to all for the kind comments. My love for writing was nurtured in college by Erika (and Aristotle), then further nurtured by a need to process some of the intense experiences in the medical arena.
I was once a Grace in 1973 and enjoyed this invitation to wonder what it might have been like for the team who cared for me and my young parents if any of the Pulse readers remembers a doctor Watts from Boston Children’s Hospital in the early 70s, I’d love to learn more about him!
Dear Dave, (Excuse me: Dr. Thoele!)
It may be many, many years since Advanced Rhetoric, but you have so clearly retained the skill as a writer and as a gentle, thoughtful young man that were evident then. Your essay here is compelling as a narrative and thought-provoking even for those of us who are engaged in far less significant endeavors. Well done!
I enjoyed the writing, straight forward and even and to the point. Tx
Dr. Thoele,
Thanks for being able to recognize in that moment that your colleagues, though well-intentioned, were hanging the crepe too heavily. They were weighing down Grace’s parents. Thanks also for remembering the wise words of your mentor, that it doesn’t take much truth-telling to balance realism with hope. I’m glad you are a “realistic cheerleader.”
Yep. Great story!
A deeply meaningful and inspiring piece. Thanks for sharing it.