The Phoenix

Aiding her dying husband, a geriatrici­an learns the emotional and physical toll of caregiving

- By Judith Graham Kaiser Health News

The loss of a husband. The death of a sister. Taking in an elderly mother with dementia.

This has been a year like none other for Dr. Rebecca Elon, who has dedicated her profession­al life to helping older adults.

It’s taught her what families go through when caring for someone with serious illness as nothing has before.

“Reading about caregiving of this kind was one thing,” she said. “Experienci­ng it was entirely different.”

Were it not for the challenges she’s faced during the coronaviru­s pandemic, Elon might not have learned firsthand how exhausting endof-life care can be, physically and emotionall­y — something she understood only abstractly previously as a geriatrici­an.

And she might not have been struck by what she called the deepest lesson of this pandemic: that caregiving is a manifestat­ion of love, and that love means being present with someone even when suffering seems overwhelmi­ng.

All these experience­s have been “a gift, in a way: They’ve truly changed me,” said Elon, 66, a part-time associate professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and an adjunct associate professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Elon’s uniquely rich perspectiv­e on the pandemic is informed by her multiple roles: family caregiver, geriatrici­an and policy expert specializi­ng in long-term care.

“I don’t think we, as a nation, are going to make needed improvemen­ts (in long-term care) until we take responsibi­lity for our aging mothers and fathers — and do so with love and respect,” she said.

Elon has been acutely aware of prejudice against older adults — and determined to overcome it — since she first expressed interest in geriatrics in the late 1970s.

“Why in the world would you want to do that?” she recalled being asked by a department chair at Baylor College of Medicine, where she was a medical student. “What can you possibly do for those (old) people?”

Elon ignored the scorn and became the first geriatrics fellow at Baylor, in Houston, in 1984. She cherished the elderly aunts and uncles she had visited every year during her childhood and was eager to focus on this new specialty, which was just being establishe­d in the U.S.

“She’s an extraordin­ary advocate for elders and families,” said Dr. Kris Kuhn, a retired geriatrici­an and longtime friend.

In 2007, Elon was named geriatrici­an of the year by the American Geriatrics Society.

Her life took an unexpected turn in 2013 when she started noticing personalit­y changes and judgment lapses in her husband, Dr. William Henry Adler III, former chief of clinical immunology research at the National Institute on Aging, part of the federal National Institutes of Health. Proud and stubborn, he refused to seek medical attention for several years.

Eventually, however, Adler’s decline accelerate­d and in 2017 a neurologis­t diagnosed frontotemp­oral dementia with motor neuron disease, an immobilizi­ng condition. Two years later, Adler could barely swallow or speak and had lost the ability to climb down the stairs in their Severna Park, Md., house.

“He became a prisoner in our upstairs bedroom,” Elon said.

By then, Elon had cut back on work significan­tly and hired a home health aide to come in several days a week.

In January 2020, Elon enrolled Adler in hospice and began arranging to move him to a nearby assisted living center. Then, the pandemic hit. Hospice staffers stopped coming. The home health aide quit. The assisted living center went on lockdown. Not visiting Adler wasn’t imaginable, so Elon kept him at home, remaining responsibl­e for his care.

“I lost 20 pounds in four months,” she told me. “It was incredibly demanding work, caring for him.”

Meanwhile, another crisis was brewing. In Kankakee, Ill., Elon’s sister, Melissa Davis, was dying of esophageal cancer and no longer able to care for their mother, Betty Davis, 96.

The two had lived together for more than a decade, and Davis, who has dementia, required significan­t assistance.

Elon sprang into action. She and two other sisters moved their mother to an assisted living facility in Kankakee while Elon decided to relocate a few hours away, at a continuing care retirement community in Milwaukee, where she’d spent her childhood.

“It was time to leave the East Coast behind and be closer to family,” she said.

By the end of May, Elon and her husband were settled in a two-bedroom apartment in Milwaukee with a balcony looking out over Lake Michigan. The facility has a restaurant downstairs that delivered meals, a concierge service, a helpful hospice agency in the area and other amenities that relieved Elon’s isolation.

“I finally had help,” she said. “It was like night and day.”

Previously bedbound, Adler would transfer to a chair with the help of a lift (one couldn’t be installed in their Maryland home) and look contentedl­y out the window at paraglider­s and boats sailing by.

“In medicine, we often look at people who are profoundly impaired and ask, ‘What kind of quality of life is that?’” Elon said. “But even though Bill was so profoundly impaired, he still had a strong will to live and retained the capacity for joy and interactio­n.”

If she hadn’t been by his side day and night, Elon said, she might not have appreciate­d this.

Meanwhile, her mother moved to an assisted living center outside Milwaukee to be nearer to Elon and other family members. But things didn’t go well.

The facility was on lockdown most of the time and staff members weren’t especially attentive. Concerned about her mother’s well-being, Elon took her out of the facility and brought her to her apartment in late December.

For two months, she tended to her husband’s and mother’s needs. In mid-February, Adler, then 81, took a sharp turn for the worse. Unable

COURTESY OF DR. KRIS KUHN

to speak, his face set in a grimace, he pounded the bed with his hands, breathing heavily. With hospice workers’ help, Elon began administer­ing morphine to ease his pain and agitation.

“I thought, ‘Oh, my God, is this what we ask families to deal with?’” she said.

Though she had been a hospice medical director, “that didn’t prepare me for the emotional exhaustion and the ambivalenc­e of giving morphine to my husband.”

Elon’s mother was distraught when Adler died 10 days later, asking repeatedly what had happened to him and weeping when she was told. At some point, Elon realized her mother was also grieving all the losses she had endured over the past year: the loss of her home and friends in Kankakee; the loss of Melissa, who’d died in May; and the loss of her independen­ce.

That, too, was a revelation made possible by being with her every day.

“The dogma with people with dementia is you just stop talking about death because they can’t process it,” Elon said. “But I think that if you repeat what’s happened over and over and you put it in context and you give them time, they can grieve and start to recover.”

“Mom is doing so much better with Rebecca,” said Deborah Bliss, 69, Elon’s older sister, who lives in Plano, Texas, and who believes there are benefits for her sister as well. “I think having (Mom) there after Bill died, having someone else to care for, has been a good distractio­n.”

And so, for Elon, as for so many families across the country, a new chapter has begun, born out of harsh necessitie­s.

The days pass relatively calmly, as Elon works and she and her mother spend time together.

“Mom will look out at the lake and say, ‘Oh, my goodness, these colors are so beautiful,’” Elon said. “When I cook, she’ll tell me, ‘It’s so nice to have a meal with you.’ When she goes to bed at night, she’ll say, ‘Oh, this bed feels so wonderful.’ She’s happy on a momentto-moment basis. And I’m very thankful she’s with me.”

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States