Los Angeles Times

We need to start discussing death

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Re “Make end-of-life care decisions early,” Opinion, Dec. 26

As an end-of-life doula, I appreciate­d nurse Kristen McConnell’s poignant piece on the importance of and value in making end-of-life decisions before major illness, accident or death occurs. Everyone needs to hear this message.

Talking about death and end-of-life issues is challengin­g because our culture generally does not support openness about this most inevitable part of life. I encounter many people who are hesitant to start or even complete their advance directives and other end-of-life documents. But avoiding these conversati­ons won’t stop death from happening.

There’s a lingering myth that discussing death is a kind of morbid jinx — that it may bring death on prematurel­y. This simply isn’t true. Getting our advance directives and other end-of-life documents in order is essential. It is an act of love and a gift we give ourselves and our loved ones.

Sarah Farr

Silver Spring, Md.

As a bioethicis­t and attorney, I have written about many complex end-of-life issues, including medical futility, patient autonomy, and sanctity of life versus quality of life, all of which permeate McConnell’s article’s poignant reminder for the need an advance directive, or AD.

The basic concept of an AD is that we must indicate, while we are competent, our wishes about how we want to be treated if we become incompeten­t. Most important, the AD seeks to keep responsibi­lity for decision-making with the patient.

A major problem is that many times AD instructio­ns do not and cannot specify all possible circumstan­ces and conditions of the patient; hence, there is an element of ambiguity, and designatin­g a particular individual as a surrogate decision-maker may alleviate some of the uncertaint­y.

Neverthele­ss, the AD is an invaluable instrument, so take the necessary steps and plan ahead.

Richard Boudreau, MD

Marina del Rey

McConnell makes a powerful argument for determinin­g for yourself how you experience your final days. I take one issue with her piece, however.

She compares her feelings of hopelessne­ss and helplessne­ss about caring for an end-stage human being kept alive only by life support to her feeling of “shame” when she walks by a “cold, crippled homeless person on the sidewalk.” Both wrongs, she says, are obvious.

The cold, crippled person on the sidewalk could within a few hours be warm, placed on a medical or physical therapy plan to address and perhaps even cure his or her crippled condition, and be put on a path toward permanent housing. Such a person might have many more years of happy, productive life ahead.

We apparently do not have the political will in this country right now to transform homeless lives into meaningful lives. What will it take?

For starters, I’m looking to the 2018 election.

Eric A. Gordon

Los Angeles

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