The Pak Banker

Who will make final decisions in the future

- Angela Y Lee

With an aging, childless future, who's going to take care of us when we get old? Who's going to make those end-of-life decisions for us when we can no longer decide for ourselves? A recent global report from Axios, "The Aging Childless Future," shows that in the U.S., a fertility rate below the "replacemen­t rate," according to the Centers for Disease Control, occurs at the same time as the rise in global life expectancy. In 2015, the global life expectancy of about 70 years old will rise to 83 years old in 2100, according to U.N. data.

The report states, "Except in Africa, by 2050 about a quarter of the world population will be 60 or older. At about 900 million now, their numbers will rise to about 3.2 billion in 2100. By 2080, those 65 or older will be 29.1 percent of the global population - and 12.7 percent will be 80 or over, Eurostat reports.

A troubling takeaway from the report is that there simply will not be enough workers to support the elderly, In the U.S., there are fewer than four workers per retired person. In seven European countries, there are three and in Japan, there are two workers per retired person. The implicatio­ns of this population shift affect public policy, health care, elder care, end of life decisions, the overall economy and every family in America and across the world. I understand this firsthand. My mother is 96 years old and has Alzheimer's. Two months ago she suffered a massive stroke and was in a coma for two weeks. Her heart rate slowed down to the 50s and 60s; her blood pressure dropped to 70/44. Her body was not ingesting the food she was fed through a feeding tube.

My siblings and I decided to remove the tube to make her feel more comfortabl­e. We were preparing for her departure; and the priest (who was a former student of hers) came to administer the Annointing of the Sick. And one of us was always there with her. Gradually her heartbeat got stronger, her blood pressure started to climb and she was able to breathe without the support of the ventilator. The doctors' prognosis was bleak - our mother would inevitably get pneumonia, or some infection. We had discussed and all agreed that we would not want to prolong her suffering. So no resuscitat­ion, no reattachin­g to the ventilator and no antibiotic­s. What about the feeding tube? One option was not to reintroduc­e nutrients through the feeding tube and essentiall­y let her waste away. The other option was to reintroduc­e nutrients and wait for some infection to happen (which according to the doctors was just a matter of time). Starving mother to death might be a more humane decision, but it was immediatel­y rejected by my sister who is a Buddhist. She thought our mother wanted to live and we should honor her wish and give her a chance.

Mother did not have a living will. We were all trying to make a decision on her behalf - based on what we thought she wanted, based on what we thought was best and on what we personally would like to happen if we were in her situation.

Our mother had on occasions before the stroke complained that she was bored and life was not worth living. But that didn't necessaril­y mean that she wanted to die. Her complaint could be her way of telling us that she wanted us to visit more often.

Families all across the globe are faced with similar scenarios. In a future where perhaps children are not there to facilitate these decisions, how will these life and death decisions be decided and by whom? Leaving these decisions to chance, or to administra­tors, health-care workers and other strangers is a frightenin­g possibilit­y. Everyone should have a living will - in order to depart this world with dignity, free from prolonged pain and suffering. However, an end-of-life decision made as young and healthy people may not be the same end-of-life decision when older, weaker and perhaps unable to communicat­e.

Research in affect forecastin­g - or the ability to accurately predict future emotions-has consistent­ly shown that people are reliably inaccurate in predicting how they would feel in different situations. In one study, younger participan­ts with a mean age of 25.5 years and older adults with a mean age of 74.3 years have been shown to make different prediction­s about how they would feel if they win or lose money. Older adults reported feeling less negative than younger adults when they lost money. Who is to say that end-of-life decisions made when we are young are the right decisions for us when we are old? My own research has shown that when people are cognitivel­y depleted or physically tired, they feel more vulnerable and are more likely to engage in self-protection. Across different studies, depleted participan­ts reported being less likely to engage in risky behaviors such as having unprotecte­d sex and more likely to engage in risk-reduction behaviors such as getting tested for kidney diseases and chlamydia.

When people are not able to think properly or reason logically, they revert to relying on instincts. And the survival or selfpreser­vation instinct is a very strong instinct. So if we are trying to make an important end-of-life decision for ourselves when we can still think properly by anticipati­ng what we would want when we could no longer think properly, we may be off the mark.

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