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September Third Year

Today a patient died. Jake was forty years old. When he came into the emergency room, Jake was dying of sepsis. I gave him some pain medication, and he just slipped away. I did try to save him. As his blood pressure dropped, I ran fluids and antibiotics. I put his head down to keep blood flowing to his brain. I ordered labs and an X-ray and an EKG.

I had taken care of Jake several times during his previous hospitalizations. He was sweet, but tired. He was blind from diabetes, and his irises were gray-white. I think he shut his eyes as he died, but I can’t quite remember.

His sister and his brother were rushing to the hospital, and he’d wanted to die at home with them. So I tried to get him a little more time. The edges of my eyes were burning as I held his hand and put the phone next to his ear so his brother could say, “It’s time for you to rest.”

“I hate when doctors do that,” someone in the room said.

His brother and I talked to him for a few minutes. His heart had stopped before I could call his brother. But I lied; I didn’t want his brother to know that he’d missed it—the death.

Someone once told me that every person’s heart has a finite number of beats—when the count is up, so are you. I don’t think that is a real medical fact, but I’ve never looked it up. I think I want to hold onto that idea for some reason. Today, I wondered if the same is true of tears.

“Is this her first death?” the nurse asked me about the first-year resident, who couldn’t or didn’t control her tears. My own tears had already started drying.

Do they hold only a finite number of tears? I wondered. Have I spent them all already?

I remember the first dead body I ever saw. I was on the train from Philadelphia to New York. It was winter, and in a train yard I saw a man sprawled in the snow on the tracks. He was face up, and his eyes were closed.

He must be dead, I thought as the train moved on. But maybe he was just drunk, lying there in the snow. I didn’t call anyone to tell them about the man in the snow.

The first time I heard someone dying, I was a medical student. I was in a public hospital, and from out in the hallway I could hear the patient’s heart monitor beeping—and the doctor and the nurse arguing.

The doctor wanted the monitors to be disconnected: “He wants comfort measures only.”

“We need to know when he dies,” the nurse snapped. “We need that bed for another patient.”

He was alone, and I wished someone would go sit with him as he experienced this process of dying, suspended between life and death. I listened to the slowing monitor, but I didn’t sit with him.

I was a first-year family-medicine resident when my first primary-care patient died. I had discharged him to a nursing home that neglected him. He came back to the hospital covered in bedsores, septic and dying.

I went to the hospital on my day off to be with him. I didn’t know what music he liked, but I sat with him for a while one evening, playing Frank Sinatra and Motown while he muttered deliriously about Putin and Ukraine. Then I went home.

The healthcare system had called this man “my” patient–as if physicians have ownership of patients. As his family doctor, I’d been assigned responsibility for his health, but when he was dying, my attending physician tried to absolve me, saying, “It’s not your fault.”

The first time I told a man that he was dying was in the hospital, a couple of months later. He didn’t look ill, but his failing liver and kidneys had revealed a secret history of drinking.

I sat at a table under fluorescent lights with him and told him, while his partner listened on the phone. The man wept, as did I.

“I want to be in my garden in the sun,” he said. After he was discharged, I called him every day for a week.

The last time we spoke, he said, “I’m too tired to go outside today.” I still wonder if he got to sit in the sun.

My grandfather died at eighty, the summer after I graduated from college. He said he had the “worst headache of my life.” By the time he arrived at the hospital, he was no longer conscious. He’d had a massive cerebral hemorrhage. My grandmother decided that we would not ask for additional interventions.

“He wouldn’t want it,” she said.

My whole family was there as we disconnected the ventilator; we were singing.

I laid my head on his chest as he slowly stopped breathing. We sang and sang. Back then, I wanted a few more days, hours, minutes—but now I feel lucky that I was there.

Now I’m here with Jake who died today. I’m thinking about all of these people. And I wonder, Can I keep my heart tender like this? Should I keep my heart tender?

My medical supervisors tell me to toughen up. They tell me it’s for my own good. They tell me that boundaries are required for survival. They tell me that we truly have only a finite number of tears. They tell me that I shouldn’t wonder about the sun, the music, the tears—if I do, I won’t be able to keep on keeping on. They tell me not to waste too much time thinking about what I could have done, because physicians are the last line of defense in this battle against death, and we must save our energy for the next patient. I’ll finish residency soon, and they tell me that, as a doctor, I cannot grieve everyone.

My eyes are dry now, but I don’t feel any better.

Anjali Jaiman was a third-year family-medicine resident at Brown University when she wrote this. “Telling my stories is how I find time to grieve.”

Comments

12 thoughts on “September Third Year”

  1. Dr. ESTHER JOSEPH POTTOORE

    Thank you for sharing a beautiful life experience!
    After being a nurse for 35 years, I have one piece of advice. Don’t be afraid to cry with and for your patients! Crying is a form of healing and sometimes the best treatment that they may need! Nobody deserves to die a lonely death! Walk your path with conviction and courage!

  2. I share the sentiment of the others who commented. Learning to be present for the process of dying, the person who is dying, those who love them, AND ourselves, is just that–a learning process. Putting a barrier to the emotions is a way of distancing from the learning.
    So glad you are a family physician!

  3. Thank you for sharing this! Caring is the crux of health. Medicine can only do so much, but caring heals both caregiver and patient, even if it does not stop the inevitable. I hope YOU find time to heal after each encounter you have with death.
    I’ve come to realize that for me, it is a precious, though difficult, gift to be with a person as they are taking their last breath. My role in that moment is to provide dignity, respect, and caring, and I am forever enriched during that process, knowing that I have contributed just a little bit to make their passage meaningful. Please keep caring! I hope someone like you will be with me when it’s my time to go.

  4. Thank you for sharing your vulnerability with us. One of the things I learned in years of ICU and hospice medicine was that I am but one of many caregivers for each patient. I don’t have to be THE one closest to each patient, because they may have a tight relationship with a nurse or social worker, or aid, or another physician, frequently based on shared history, language, culture, religion, etc. So when I see that another teammate has a close relationship with a patient, that’s an opportunity for me to step back, to focus on the patients with whom I have that close relationship. In this way, the hard emotional bits can be shared. I don’t have to carry the whole load. I hope this helps. But for me–it is these close relationships and (hopefully temporary) emotional distress that create meaning for me in my work.

  5. Louis Verardo, MD, FAAFP

    Like you, Dr. Jaiman, I remember being told to maintain some distance emotionally with my patients, and I recognize that such advice was given in good faith most of the time. Too invested, you lose objectivity, and perhaps also clinical effectiveness for your patient. Too distant, then you risk losing empathy and becoming callous. After 40 years of practice, I found that there was really no stock answer for how you should be as a doctor. Each case required a nuanced approach, a “sweet spot”, if you will. Every physician carries with himself or herself the memory of a patient whose death carried a significant impact. Mine was a young woman of 20 whom I met as an intern in 1978. She had a rare condition, poorly understood at the time, which was causing her lung tissue to transform into muscle. Her prognosis worsened as the condition progressed throughout the year, and my on-call schedule gave me ample opportunities to check on her status, sometimes even getting a stat blood gas on nights when she struggled to breathe. She was the favorite patient of all us house staff as well as the pediatric nurses, and one night I remember her quite animated and happy because she had gotten pictures back from a pre-illness event, and she was delighted with how she looked. She had made copies of several of the snapshots and was distributing them that evening to any of the staff who came into her room. I got my picture when I had to check on a chest x-ray done earlier that day, and I still have her photograph in my home office. I think of her often, and while I was very saddened by her passing, what I remember most is how she wouldn’t let her illness define her. I will remember that aspect of her story until the day that I pass on as well, and her courage and passion for living well helped me to stay in Medicine in spite of the expected losses I would go on to experience over a 40 year span of patient care.
    You seem like a good doctor to me, Dr. Jaiman; patients need someone like you, someone not afraid to feel, someone strong enough to bear the burden of loss. Hang in there, my young colleague, it does get more manageable, I promise…

  6. Thank you for this article, for your heart, for your tears. Death isn’t something we have to fear or fight to prevent, it’s as natural as birth. When a physician looses touch with the precious gift of connection to another human being I hope they choose to find a different path to follow and leave the doctoring to compassionate others. I was glad to read how you and your family sang during your grandfather’s transition and how you held such beautiful space for your patient allowing his brother to speak to him before he transitioned, even if you lied. I hope you always keep your heart open.

  7. I wouldn’t want a career or a life in which I had to hide my feelings from myself or others. I wouldn’t want such a doctor either. I want a human doctor who can understand what it is like to feel – all kinds of feelings.

  8. Henry Schneiderman

    This is a great and deeply honest account. I share the counsel of the other commentators, Anjali: keep the tender heart. And be gentle and forgiving with yourself, not over-critical. You have given the gift of empathy, and your compassion is deep. Your patients are lucky to have you. For they do have you as their doctor, and you them as your patient. You have articulated what it is to feel, and this palliative insight and action needs to be part of the repertoire of every clinician—not just the palliatives.

  9. Dear Anjali,
    Please keep your tender heart. My father was a doctor who grieved for every patient until the day he died. (He was still practicing at 84.) It’s how you keep your humanity.

    Best,

    Susan

  10. No, you won’t grieve everyone, but there will always be a special few that you will always remember. There is a great difference between shedding a few tears at a death, and sobbing uncontrollably. Families will be touched that you were able to show (by a few tears) that you cared about this person. Wondering about “the sun, the music, the tears” will make you a more compassionate doctor, and allow you to ask your patients what is important to them. Thanks for sharing this essay with us.

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