Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/10/why-i-hope-to-die-at-75/379329/
I agree with a lot of what this guy says. IMO "we" do too much to prolong life, with no quality of life. I saw a lot of comments during the early Covid days along the lines of "We all have to lock down or else my 97 year old grandmother with (lists 7 or 8 serious-terminal health conditions) might DIE!"
But who are you to say whether someone has quality of life? My mom with cancer said she wanted to live as long as possible and wanted every treatment possible. Maybe someone else would look at her and say her quality of life wasn't worth it, but it's her life and should be her choice.
If she's paying for it out of pocket, sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/10/why-i-hope-to-die-at-75/379329/
I agree with a lot of what this guy says. IMO "we" do too much to prolong life, with no quality of life. I saw a lot of comments during the early Covid days along the lines of "We all have to lock down or else my 97 year old grandmother with (lists 7 or 8 serious-terminal health conditions) might DIE!"
But who are you to say whether someone has quality of life? My mom with cancer said she wanted to live as long as possible and wanted every treatment possible. Maybe someone else would look at her and say her quality of life wasn't worth it, but it's her life and should be her choice.
If she's paying for it out of pocket, sure.
By that line of thinking then every obese person should pay oop as well.
Nope. False analogy.
NP. I don’t know… We can’t help aging. We can however often do quite a lot to help being obese or a smoker.
Old people rarely contribute to society, even in a basic way. They can’t work as well as they could when they were younger, they don’t have children or other dependents, they suck up tons of social resources, what used to be basic interventions are dangerous and risky, etc. These would be factors considered by an organ transplant team and is why there are age cutoffs for organ transplants and it’s rare an older person would be selected anyways.
Most importantly we spend a shit ton of money earmarked for healthcare on the final year of life. It’s some crazy percentage of total expenditure. You want free universal healthcare? Decide when we stop providing healthcare to old people (they can pay out of pocket) and just give them some morphine as they die of wtv ailment. You’ll need to know that before any plan works.
I'm gonna need numbers on this, or you're just blowing smoke.
I'm not the pp you are quoting, but from JAMA: "In fact, about one quarter of all Medicare spending goes toward care for people during their last year of life."
https://jamanetwork.com/channels/health-forum/fullarticle/2760146
Anonymous wrote:My parents have complained that the doctors treat them like they are 'expired' and not worth fixing. The doctors have told them they can't (or won't) try to address certain health problems they have. Instead they're told it's old age, just live with it. Has anyone else heard of this type of refusal to treat? What's the cutoff age?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes and when you do all these lifesaving procedures to leave someone a miserable mess unable to care for himself, there is usually an adult child with kids and stresses now stuck with guilt, resentment, sadness and exhaustion even if the person just goes into a nursing home. You slowly kill the adult child who's heart breaks trying to bring some joy to a parent who is barely alive and the grandkids are the ones who truly suffer with a burned out and exhausted parent and a grandparent who is barely what you call living. This isn't right. Our parents changed our diapers and fed us for only so many years and we can spend decades dealing with a hostile, weak, ailing, pain-stricken barely living parent trying to what...keep them alive so they can lash out more and drown in misery?
Wow. You need therapy. I'm sorry for whatever happened to your parent(s), but you need to get over the anger.
Anonymous wrote:I recently spoke with a ER doctor about my 75-year-old mother's wishes about resuscitation. He told me that across the entire population (so, old/young, healthy/unhealthy) the success rate for CPR is only 10-13%. It's also hugely traumatic to the body, particularly for an elderly person.
This shocked me. Like another poster said, I think we have a misperception from tv/movies about how successful and tame some medical procedures are. This doctor suggested it would be more humane NOT to do the full code. Intellectually I agree, although it's a terrible decision to make.
Anonymous wrote:I recently spoke with a ER doctor about my 75-year-old mother's wishes about resuscitation. He told me that across the entire population (so, old/young, healthy/unhealthy) the success rate for CPR is only 10-13%. It's also hugely traumatic to the body, particularly for an elderly person.
This shocked me. Like another poster said, I think we have a misperception from tv/movies about how successful and tame some medical procedures are. This doctor suggested it would be more humane NOT to do the full code. Intellectually I agree, although it's a terrible decision to make.
Anonymous wrote:Yes and when you do all these lifesaving procedurs to leave someone a miserable mess unable to care for himself, there is usually an adult child with kids and stresses now stuck with guilt, resentment, sadness and exhaustion even if the person just goes into a nursing home. You slowly kill the adult child who's heart breaks trying to bring some joy to a parent who is barely alive and the grandkids are the ones who truly suffer with a burned out and exhausted parent and a grandparent who is barely what you call living. This isn't right. Our parents changed our diapers and fed us for only so many years and we can spend decades dealing with a hostile, weak, ailing, pain-stricken barely living parent trying to what...keep them alive so they can lash out more and drown in misery?
Anonymous wrote:I know Louis CK was cancelled but he had a funny bit about how even in your 40s a lot of complaints about aches and pains just lead to a shrug from doctors.
Doctors typically have an economic insensitive to overtreat so if they are discouraging a treatment, that tells you something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes people/patients/families fail to accept normal aging/end of life processes. Doing invasive treatments that will not prolong someone’s life statistically but will expose them to pain and risk of disabling complications may not be good for them. Patients may die during surgery or of post op complications. Everybody thinks the percentages will go in their favor, but some people with be in that percent of those who die. Physicians have to act in the best interest of the patient even if the patient may not agree. She could doctor shop and maybe find someone else if she likes. Often elderly patients with health issues will die of something else before the disease process takes them.
Doctors also acti in the best interest of the hospital...