PORTLAND, Ore. — In the last days of her life, Annabel Kitzhaber had a decision to make: she could be the tissue-skinned woman in the hospital with the tubes and the needles, the meds and smells and the squawk of television. Or she could go home and finish the love story with the man she’d been married to for 65 years. Her husband was a soldier who had fought through Europe with Patton’s army. And as he aged, his son would call him on D-Day and thank him – for saving the world from the Nazis, for bequeathing his generation with a relatively easy time. That son, John Kitzhaber, knew exactly what his mother’s decision meant. He was not only a governor, a Democrat who served two terms in Oregon as it tried to show the world that a state could give health care to most of its citizens, but a doctor himself. At age 88, with a weak heart, and tests that showed she most likely had cancer, Annabel chose to go home, walking away from the medical-industrial complex. ‘The whole focus had been centered on her illness and her aging, said Kitzhaber. ‘But both […]
Friday, September 25th, 2009
The Way We Die Now
Author: TIMOTHY EGAN
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: September 23, 2009, 9:15 pm
Link: The Way We Die Now
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: September 23, 2009, 9:15 pm
Link: The Way We Die Now
Stephan: Having been through Hayden's death, I have a very passionate interest in the way we die. From personal experience I can say that in the world of the illness profit industry it takes work to help someone die with dignity, pain relief, comfort, and nutrition as optimal as possible.
Thanks to Rick Ingrasci, MD.