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Title: Becoming an Orthodox Presence for the Dying


1
Becoming an Orthodox Presence for the Dying
  • Daniel B. Hinshaw, M.D.
  • Palliative Care Program
  • VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System
  • Department of Surgery
  • University of Michigan

2
A brother asked a certain old man,
saying, There be two brothers, and one of them
is quiet in his cell, and prolongs his fast for
six days, and lays much travail on himself but
the other tends the sick. Whose work is more
acceptable to God? And the old man answered,
If that brother who carries his fast for six
days were to hang himself up by the nostrils, he
could not equal the other, who does service to
the sick. From The Desert Fathers (p.124)
trans. by Helen Waddell
3
Objectives
  • Define the relationship between spirituality and
    religion
  • Review patients spiritual needs and expectations
    of their caregivers in the therapeutic encounter
  • Examine the challenges to real hearing and
    listening and the importance of two concepts
    hesychia and kenosis in this process
  • Identify the central role of empathy in listening
    to/hearing the sick
  • Consider the possibility of transcending
    listening and hearing in the therapeutic
    encounter to be truly present

4
C.R. is a female patient in her early 70s who
presents with a locally advanced unresectable
colon cancer which has replaced the lower half of
her abdominal wall with a large, stinking,
fungating mass. Nursing staff have noted that
she rarely requires pain medication. On further
inquiry, it is found that she addresses her pain
with continual prayer. Be still, and know
that I am God. (Psalm 4610)
5
Spirituality
  • that which allows a person to experience
    transcendent meaning in life. This is often
    expressed as a relationship with God, but it can
    also be about nature, art, music, family, or
    community - whatever beliefs and values give a
    person a sense of meaning and purpose in life.
  • (Puchalski, C and Romer, AL J. Pall. Med.
    3129-137, 2000)

6
Religion and Spiritual Care
  • Spirituality is often grounded in a specific
    religious faith.
  • Religion is a source of meaning and framework in
    which to understand the great existential
    questions of suffering and death.
  • Religious rituals actualize belief/doctrine and
    provide tangible comfort and meaning.
  • Chaplains and caregivers often are intermediaries
    in assisting patients to find appropriate
    religious support.
  • Ask for specific religious support earlier rather
    than later.

7
Factors Considered Important at the End of Life
(Steinhauser, KE, et al. JAMA 284 2476-2482,
2000)
  • Patients and families rank ordered 9
    pre-specified attributes of the end-of-life
    experience.
  • Freedom from pain and Being at peace with God
    were ranked as most important (and were
    statistically equivalent).

8
Spiritual Needs of the Dying
  • Meaning
  • Why am I suffering
  • Have you thought about what all this
    means?
  • Value
  • Do I still have value even though I can no
    longer work?
  • Are you able to hold onto a sense of your own
    dignity and purpose?
  • Relationship
  • Who have I wronged? Who has wronged me?
  • Is there anyone to whom you need to say I
    love you or Im sorry?
  • Sulmasy, DP. JAMA 2006
    2961385-1392

9
Spiritual Experiences as Death Approaches
  • Near the transition to active dying, cognitive
    changes occur - often dismissed (or treated) as
    delirium by physician.
  • Dream life changes - vivid and often symbolic
    dreams may occur (e.g., taking a journey,
    finishing a building project). The dying patient
    may be uncertain if it occurred while asleep or
    awake.
  • Not infrequently the dying person will be found
    speaking to unseen presences - often deceased
    relatives.
  • Experiences are usually comforting (although they
    may be perplexing to loved ones and caregivers).

10
Interventions to Address Spiritual Pain
  • Psychotherapy
  • Pastoral (chaplains)
  • Religious
  • Complementary therapy
  • Caregiver-initiated (e.g., presence)
  • Medical (e.g., palliative sedation)

11
Yea, Master, Lord our God, hearken unto me a
sinner and thine unworthy servant in this hour,
and loose thy servant, N., from this intolerable
sickness and the bitter impotency which holdeth
him, and give him rest where the souls of the
righteous dwell
  • Prayer for one who has suffered long from Prayers
    for the Dying in An Abridged Euchologion ed. by
    David F. Abramtsov

12
Most Important Behaviors and Attitudes of
Physicians Caring for Women Living with Breast
Cancer
  • Communication based on active listening
  • Awareness of/respect for the womans depth of
    knowledge about her illness
  • Honesty
  • Partnership
  • Interest in the patient as a person
  • Use of touch to communicate
  • Harris, SR and Templeton, E, Breast J. 7 (6)
    444-449, 2001

13
Conversations with the Dying
  • Difficult to contain within a short clinic visit
    or single ward encounter
  • Content/depth depends on level of trust
  • Trust depends on a relationship, often built over
    time
  • May often involve questions that do not have easy
    answers
  • Puchalski, CM Health Progress, July-August,
    2004, vol. 85 (4)

14
Partnership and Spirituality
  • Healing can not occur in a vacuum.
  • Partnership implies that the journey is one of
    shared experience where two people work together
    toward a resolution rather than one in which the
    expert doles out advice, leaving the patient to
    sort through the problems alone.
  • Puchalski, CM Health Progress, July-August,
    2004, vol. 85 (4)

15
Hearing and Listening
  • Hear perceive by the ear or listen to give
    or pay attention to (often in a favorable light)
  • Listen to give attention with the ear attend
    closely for the purpose of hearing give ear
    with a secondary meaning pay attention heed
    obey but also wait attentively for a sound
  • Websters New Universal Unabridged
    Dictionary, 2003, Barnes Noble Publishing, Inc.

16
How can we listen with all the noise?
  • Finding stillness or silence in the therapeutic
    encounter
  • Hesychia

17
The Lord will fight for you, and you have
only to be still.Exodus 1414
18
Hesychia and Kenosis
  • A life-threatening illness can focus ones
    attention like nothing else.
  • A terminal illness and the process of dying are
    each persons kenosis.
  • The kenosis of the dying (and of course we are
    all dying!) is a stripping away of the noise so
    that real silence - hesychia can be experienced.
  • This kenosis is the foundation for true hearing
    and listening.

19
Hesychia and ListeningElijah at Mt Horeb
  • They seek my life to take it away. And He
    said, Go forth, and stand upon the mount before
    the Lord. And behold, the Lord passed by, and a
    great and strong wind rent the mountains, and
    broke in pieces the rocks before the Lord, but
    the Lord was not in the wind and after the wind
    an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the
    earthquake and after the earthquake a fire, but
    the Lord was not in the fire and after the fire
    a still small voice. I Kings
    1910 ff (RSV)

20
Hesychia and ListeningMartha and Mary
  • He entered a village and a woman named
    Martha received Him into her house. And she had a
    sister called Mary, who sat at the Lords feet
    and listened to His teaching. But Martha was
    distracted with much serving and she went to Him
    and said, Lord, do you not care that my sister
    has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help
    me. But the Lord answered her, Martha, Martha,
    you are anxious and troubled about many things
    one thing is needful. Mary has chosen the good
    portion, which shall not be taken away from her.
    Luke 10 38 ff (RSV)

21
Hesychia and Listening
  • Stillness is a necessary precursor for real
    hearing and listening, as much for the caregiver
    as for the patient.

22
Kenosis and Empathy
23
Empathy
  • The intellectual identification with or
    vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts,
    or attitudes of another
  • Websters New Universal Unabridged Dictionary,
    2003, Barnes Noble Publishing, Inc.
  • Original root from Greek word pascho
    suffer entering into the suffering of another

24
Suffering in Traditional Christianity
  • The angels at the tomb identified the risen
    Lord as the Crucified Oneand the French
    Catholic philosopher Pascal echoed this message
    when he declared, Christ is in agony until the
    end of the world. The Risen Lord remains forever
    the Crucified One. Those who are united to him,
    then, are united as well to his once-for-all
    crucifixion, whose meaning and power endure
    throughout the ages Suffering, therefore, can
    become an effective means for creating a deep and
    intimate communion with Christ and with the
    afflicted members of his Body.
  • Breck, J, The Sacred Gift of Life,
    p. 221

25
For one to be ill is a divine visitation.
Illness is the greatest gift from God. The only
thing that man can give to God is pain.From An
Athonite Gerontikon, p. 430
26
Process of EmpathyEdith Stein
  • Three levels
  • First level active listening
    experiencing the other person as an object
    (trying to put ourselves in the others place)
  • Second level identification merging
    experiencing the others state of mind as ones
    own (a moment of grace)
  • Third level sympathy having now
    recovered ones sense of self and standing side
    by side with the other
  • Maatta, SM, Nurs. Philos. 7 3-10, 2006

27
Barriers to Empathy...
  • To have pain is to have certainty. The patient
    has this certainty - the caregiver does not.
    Caregivers must overcome their tendency to doubt
    the patient.
  • Caregivers should listen to their patients
    complaints of pain (their suffering) not to
    explain but to understand, not to diagnose but to
    witness and help.
  • (Schweizer, H To Give Suffering a Language.
    Lit. and Med. 14 210-221, 1995)

28
...Barriers to Empathy
  • Sometimes patients (and co-workers!) are not
    particularly likeable, indeed they may be abusive
    and threatening to the caregiver.
  • Finding a common history or shared experience can
    serve as a bridge in developing a relationship of
    caring for the difficult patient (co-worker).
  • (Liaschenko, J J Pall. Care 10 83-89,
    1994)

29
A Foundation for Empathy
  • He whom we look down upon, whom we cannot
    bear to see, the very sight of whom causes us to
    vomit, is the same as we, formed with us from the
    selfsame clay, compacted of the same elements.
    Wherever he suffers we also can suffer.
  • (St. Jerome - quoted in Risse, GB Mending
    Bodies, Saving Souls A History of Hospitals.
    Oxford University Press, 1999)

30
A Biological Basis for Empathy(Singer, T, et
al. Science 3031157-1162, 2004)
  • Characteristic patterns of activation in the
    brain can be visualized using functional MRI when
    a subject experiences a painful stimulus.
  • The Pain Matrix is a collection of anatomic sites
    in the brain that is activated during the
    experience of pain.

31
A Biological Basis for Empathy
  • The anatomic sites making up the Pain Matrix
    account for both the sensory and affective
    (emotional) component of the pain experience.
  • The affective components of the Pain Matrix are
    primarily activated when empathy is aroused in a
    person.

32
Dealing with Suffering as Caregivers
33
A single death is a tragedy, millions are only a
statistic!
  • Joseph Stalin

34
a man stands perplexed at the sight of human
sin, and wonders whether to combat it by force or
by humble love. Always decide I will combat it
by humble love. If you resolve on that once for
all, you can conquer the whole world. Loving
humility is a terrible force - it is the
strongest of all things, and there is nothing
else like it.
  • Starets Zosima
  • Brothers Karamazov (Dostoevsky)

35
Healing for the Caregiver
  • Breaking down ones denial of suffering and death
  • Overcoming ones fear and sense of failure in the
    face of intense suffering and death
  • Developing and experiencing empathy

36
Co-sufferingCan we help carry the cross of
another?
  • Come Mr. Frodo! he cried. I cant carry it for
    you, but I can carry you and it as well
  • (Sam Gamgee quoted in Tolkien, J.R.R., The Return
    of the King, p.919, Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston,
    1994)

37
St. Maria of Paris and Ravensbruck
  • Our neighbors cross should be a sword that
    pierces our soul. To co-participate, co-feel,
    co-suffer with our neighbors destiny this is
    love.

38
Listening Beyond Listening
39
Listening and Presence
  • Giving ones full attention to another person
  • Subordinating ones own ego completely to be
    fully open to the other
  • Being fully present on all levels physically,
    emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually
  • Transcending the limits of the space/time
    continuum

40
Creating a Therapeutic Environment...
  • A therapeutic environment is more than
    architecture.
  • A therapeutic environment exists to the extent
    that a therapeutic organization is present.
  • How do all the caregivers interact with one
    another and with the patient?
  • Is there a consistent expression of loving
    compassion for the patient from the entire team?
  • Can the team members empathize with each other as
    well as with their patients?

41
Creating a Therapeutic Environment
  • Can the team be organized so that two people
    always come when its a question of a procedure
    that may be painful? One simply to offer her
    presence, her warmth, and attention, while the
    other, just as attentively, does what has to be
    done with all possible competence. When three
    people get together like this, each wishing to
    draw on the presence of the other two in order to
    face a difficult moment, a composite being with
    truly miraculous powers is brought into
    existence.
  • (De Hennezel, Marie, Intimate Death, How the
    Dying Teach Us How to Live, p. 50, translated by
    Carol B. Janeway, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, NY,
    1997)

42
Kenosis in the Therapeutic Encounter
  • You are missing something, as well as the
    patient missing something, unless you come not
    merely in a professional role but in a role of
    one human being meeting another.
  • Dame Cicely Saunders as quoted in Egnew,
    TR. The Meaning of Healing Transcending
    Suffering. Ann Fam Med 2005 3255-262

43
The Reciprocal Character of Healing in the
Therapeutic Encounter
  • For healing to occur, it may only be necessary to
    experience or witness (be present for) the
    suffering of another or for the suffering one to
    experience the compassion and love of the
    caregiver.
  • The healer is the patient and the patient is the
    healer.
  • Christ is all in all. Colossians 311

44
Healing in Confession
  • A 56 year old combat veteran of the Vietnam
    War presents with severe pain, cachexia, and
    debility from widely metastatic urothelial
    cancer. During a bedside interview, he confesses
    to his direct involvement in a number of
    atrocities against civilians during his military
    service.

45
Healing in Confession
  • During leave from active duty he has an
    altercation at home and pushes his mother. His
    father kicks him out of the house and tells him
    he never wants to see him again. He returns to
    active duty and a month later he is informed that
    his father has died suddenly of a heart attack.

46
Shut Up and Listen!
  • Listening is one of the greatest spiritual
    gifts a chaplain can give a suffering patient.

  • (Sr. Sharon Burns, The Spirituality of Dying.
    Pastoral Cares Holistic Approach Is Crucial in
    Hospice, Health Prog 7248-54, 1991)

47
Being fully present is a form of listening.
  • A Boy and His Blanket

48
Silence is always beautiful, and a silent person
is always more beautiful than one who talks.
  • The Adolescent
  • Fyodor Dostoevsky

49
Who are called to care for those who suffer?
50
The Last Judgment
  • I was sick and you visited Me Matt. 25 36
  • None of the commonly used Greek words for
    healing were used (i.e., iaomai, therapeuo,
    sozo).
  • Another word, episkeptomai visit, care for
    was used.

51
Therapeuontes en ChristoBut when
the briefest breathing-space had been granted us
and them, there descended upon us this disease, a
thing that is to them more fearful than any other
object of fear, more cruel than any calamityYet
to us it was not so, but, no less than the other
misfortunes, a source of discipline and
testingMostof our brethren in their exceeding
love and affection for the brotherhood were
unsparing of themselvesvisiting the sick without
a thought as to the danger, assiduously
ministering to them, tending them in
Christdrawing upon themselves the sickness from
their neighbors, and willingly taking over their
pains. And many, when they had cared for and
restored to health others, died themselves, thus
transferring their death to themselves Bishop
Dionysius of Alexandria (mid 3rd century) as
quoted in Eusebius Ecclesiatical History (vol.
II) Loeb Classical Library, 1994
52
The Basileias of St. Basil the Great
  • Often referred to as the first hospital modeled
    on monastic hospitals of the 4th century in
    Egypt, but more than a hospital in the modern
    sense
  • Facilities included a hospital for the sick, a
    hospice for lepers, a home for the elderly, an
    orphanage, and a hostel for travelers and the
    homeless

53
St. Basil and Lepers
  • Physicians in antiquity would not treat
    hopeless, incurable cases for fear of
    diminishing ones professional reputation
  • Concern for lepers in the Basileias was a radical
    departure from prior precedent and his most
    amazing achievement according to St. Gregory of
    Nazianzus
  • St. Basil personally cared for lepers in his
    keluphokomeion
  • Crislip, AT, From Monastery to Hospital
    Christian Monasticism the Transformation of
    Health Care in Late Antiquity, University of
    Michigan Press, 2005

54
St. Basil and Lepers
  • He did not therefore disdain to honor with his
    lips this disease leprosy, noble and of noble
    ancestry and brilliant reputation though he was,
    but saluted them as brethren Basils care was
    forthe imitation of Christ, by cleansing
    leprosy, not in word, but in deed.
  • St. Gregory of Nazianzus Or. 43.63
  • The terminally ill are the lepers of today.

55
There is no meeting more meaningful than that
which takes place in the sharing of suffering,
unless it be in the sharing of death itself when
we touch immortality. From The Communion of
Love by Fr Matthew the Poor
56
A Vocation for Orthodox Christians?A
new form of philanthropic organization, even a
new expression of Christian vocation, seems
required today, if the Church is to provide a
genuine alternative to physician-assisted
suicide. True aid-in-dying could be furnished
by specially trained Christian lay persons or
medical professionalsOrthodox hospice
programsshould be ranked as high priorities
among the many pastoral tasks the Church is
called to assume Fr John Breck, The Sacred
Gift of Life - Orthodox Christianity and
Bioethics, p.239, SVS Press, Crestwood, NY 1998
57
Did not our hearts burn within us?Luke 2432
  • This is the experience of being with Him in the
    person of the dying!

58
Appendix
  • St. Elizabeths Ministry

59
An Orthodox Christian Home for the Dying
  • Create a supportive home-like environment for the
    dying who have no home (through poverty or lack
    of support systems) as an expression of Christian
    philanthropia.
  • Follow the example of the unmercenary saints - do
    not charge for services.
  • Place it within the context of a community of
    prayer (e.g., adjacent to/part of a monastery or
    a parish).
  • Hospice organizations to provide hospice services
    - staff/volunteers to provide/create loving
    home environment for the dying who live there
    until they die.

60
St. Elizabeths Ministry St. Elias Orthodox
Church, Sylvania, Ohio
  • Planning meetings over 2 years
  • Local needs assessment discussions with
    discharge planners at local hospitals and VA
    homeless coordinator
  • Internal parish needs assessment and exploring
    interest in philanthropic projects parish
    spiritual introspection
  • Modeling on other operational faith-based
    philanthropic projects (e.g., Malachi House,
    Mother Teresa home, Servant Center)
  • Identifying potential sources of support
    private philanthropy, federal (VA grant per
    diem program), community partners (including
    consortium of local Orthodox parishes)
  • Where to begin?

61
Getting Our Feet Wet Palliative Day Care
Respite for Caregivers
  • Commonly provided in UK by NHS in conjunction
    with palliative care/hospice
  • Not Funded by Medicare not available in the US
  • US Adult Day Care programs primarily provide
    respite for caregivers of demented individuals
    and/or frail elders have minimal to no
    experience with hospice

62
Palliative Day Care
  • Combine the best of adult day care with respite
    care for individuals enrolled in hospice in a
    venue provided by a church
  • Hospice would provide the medical oversight and
    volunteer training, the parish would provide the
    volunteers, use of the parish hall, food,
    recreational activities, etc.

63
Palliative Day Care
  • Palliative day care for those enrolled in hospice
    could be combined with respite care for shut-ins
    from the parish.
  • Typical day might start at 9-10 AM with brief
    refreshments (e.g. tea) then include activity
    (crafts, music, etc.), followed by lunch and then
    more activities in the afternoon ending at 4-5
    PM.

64
Palliative Day Care
  • Hospice staff could come and see their patients
    during day care and provide consultative support.
  • Many established parishes have church halls that
    may be available (underutilized) during the week.
  • Starting with a palliative day care program one
    to two days a week can provide a much needed
    service not currently offered in the US and help
    a parish confirm a larger vocation/mission that
    may include creating a home for the dying poor
    which would require 24/7 support.
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