Montreal Gazette

‘How We Die’ author dies

Medical ethicist told daughter he had lived ‘such a beautiful life’

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HAMDEN, CONN. — Dr. Sherwin Nuland, a medical ethicist who opposed assisted suicide and wrote an award-winning book about death called “How We Die,” has died at age 83.

He died of prostate cancer on Monday at his home in Hamden, Connecticu­t, said his daughter Amelia Nuland, who recalled how he told her he wasn’t ready for death because he loved life.

“He told me, ‘I’m not scared of dying, but I’ve built such a beautiful life, and I’m not ready to leave it,”’ she said Tuesday.

Sherwin Nuland was born in New York and taught medical ethics at Yale University in New Haven. He was critical of the medical profession’s obsession with prolonging life when common sense would dictate further treatment is futile. He wrote nature “will always win in the end, as it must if our species is to survive.

“The necessity of nature’s final victory was accepted in generation­s before our own,” he wrote. “Doctors were far more willing to recognize the signs of defeat and far less arrogant about denying them.”

How We Die: Reflection­s on Life’s Final Chapter was published in 1994 and won a National Book Award for nonfiction. In it Nuland describes how life is lost to diseases and old age. It helped foster national debate over end-of-life decisions and doctor-assisted suicide, which he called “the exact opposite direction in which we ought to go.”

He said that when he was a boy death was a natural phenomenon, accepted when certain signs and symptoms showed it was near.

“Now when the same signs appear, it’s a signal to operate one more time, to put in yet another tube, put in a fourth pacemaker after the third failed, to start a new course of chemothera­py, send the patient down for another CATscan,” he said.

Nuland’s book, a bestseller in dozens of countries, contains a passionate plea to his colleagues in the medical profession to recog- nize when to let go and allow their patients to die in peace and dignity, surrounded by friends and relatives, not by strangers in an intensive-care unit.

Nuland, a surgeon, said in a 1996 interview he hoped that when his time came he would go gently “without suffering and surrounded by loved ones.” He said then that if his death certificat­e were to read, “Died of Old Age,” he thought that “would be very nice.”

 ?? BOB CHILD/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dr. Sherwin Nuland sits in his home study in Connecticu­t, not long after winning the 1994 National Book Award for his bestsellin­g book How We Die. Nuland has died at age 83 of prostate cancer.
BOB CHILD/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dr. Sherwin Nuland sits in his home study in Connecticu­t, not long after winning the 1994 National Book Award for his bestsellin­g book How We Die. Nuland has died at age 83 of prostate cancer.

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