Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

The New Mind-body Paradigm

By: Richard Helfant, MD Home | Arts-and-Entertainment | Philosophy


Wherever a thought goes, a chemical goes with it." Deepak Chopra

Life-threatening illness is more than a crisis of the body; it is a crisis of the soul. During thirty-five years as a hospital-based cardiologist, I have seen innumerable ways in which patients react when faced with a medical catastrophe. Initially, most are overwhelmed, and feel as though they have been attacked by an alien forceas if body, mind, and spirit are under siege.

Many patients become paralyzed by fear. All resistance crumbles, replaced by passivity and resignation. Some go into denial, unwilling or unable to confront the enormity of what is happening. Yet others meet the crisis by challenging it head on, and in the process, discover within themselves the resources to confront and overcome the gravest of circumstances. At times, these patients triumph, not because of the medical care they receive, but in spite of it.

There exists in all of us, a life force: the foundation of organic existence. In some, this drive is powerful and passionate. In others, there is ambivalence about continuing the burdensome business of living. When disease strikes, many are all too ready and even willing to have their lives end. But passivity or resignation are not immutable reactions to a life-threatening illness. My patients have taught me that the will to live can be awakened at any moment during its course.

Medical science has largely been blind to the power of a patient's mind in determining the outcome of an illness. Doctors are taught to view patients as the sum of their bodily parts, and to treat diseases by relying almost exclusively on the marvels of medical technology. Their unspoken communication to patients is unmistakable: We will mobilize our array of procedures and wonder drugs to save you. If they don't work, you are beyond help.

Having spent much of my career as an academic physician directing medical research programs, I have participated in the development of technological advances that have led to this new patient-care paradigm. While today's medical arsenal is invaluable in the combat against life-threatening illnesses, it has brought about a major side effect: far-reaching changes in the time-honored patient-doctor relationship.

That bond, once an invaluable component of the healing process, has become undermined. On teaching rounds, I have always felt it important to point out the ways in which doctors unwittingly discourage patients from mobilizing their inner resources to overcome an illness by implying that these elements play no part in the outcome. I emphasize how powerful these resources can be. Experience has taught me that they are comparable to any avant-garde pill or procedure.

This was dramatically demonstrated to me many years ago by a patient named Vivian, who was suffering from progressive heart failure. The cumulative cardiac damage caused by several previous heart attacks had forced me to admit Vivian to the hospital three times in four months. Her heart had weakened to the point where it no longer responded to maximum doses of intravenous diuretics and other powerful medications. Edema fluid had accumulated in both her lungs and legs.

In the previous twenty-four hours, Vivian's kidneys had begun to shut down, making it impossible to treat the massive watery accumulations in her body. Her liver and other organ systems were also becoming affected. All therapeutic options had been exhausted. Vivian's chances for survival were close to zero.

After suffering for ten days in the Intensive Care Unit, Vivian had had enough. Look, Doctor," she said, I am seventy-two years old. My husband has been dead for fifteen years, and my daughter hasn't spoken to me since the day he died. I'm in constant pain, and I have nothing to live for. Please let me go."

Despite their estrangement, Vivian had listed her daughter Janet as the person to be notified in the event of her death. When I asked whether Janet knew how sick she had been, Vivian shook her head.

My daughter doesn't know, and I'm sure she doesn't care."

If you wouldn't mind, I'd like to call her."

I don't see the point. What good would it do?"
"It might not do any good, but I think your daughter should know what's going on with her mother."

Frankly, I think it's a waste of time."

Two nights later, Janet came to the Unit accompanied by her ten-year-old son, whom Vivian had never met.

The following morning, a different woman greeted me in the Unit. Vivian looked at me, eyes glowing, and said, My daughter is getting married in three weeks. She wants me to walk down the aisle with her." Tears welled up in Vivian's eyes, as she took my hand and whispered, I want to be there, Doctor."

Within days, Vivian's kidneys began to open up. The same dose of intravenous medication that had been ineffective now caused a substantial decrease in Vivian's edema fluid. After a week, her lungs were clear. By the end of week two, we were able to switch from intravenous to oral medications, and move Vivian out of the ICU.

Three days before discharge, Vivian began gingerly hobbling down the hospital corridor with the aid of a walker, the same one she used to walk down the aisle alongside Janet at her wedding.

Vivian not only attended her daughter's wedding, she also lived to attend her grandson's bar mitzvah three years later.

Every doctor has seen patients with a life-threatening illness make a miraculous recovery after they were thought to be beyond hope. But because medical science is unable to explain these extraordinary occurrences, their importance is often ignored. Medicine is so enamored of the apparent infallibility of science that it has become blind to other possibilities. But remarkable recoveries like Vivian's are possible for all of us. As Emily Dickinson wrote: We never know how tall we can be until we are called on to rise."



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Richard Helfant, MD, a Harvard-trained cardiologist, pioneered the development of cardiac electrophysiology and nuclear cardiology. Courageous Confrontations, Dr. Helfant's latest work, is about how to use the mind-body relationship to combat disease.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Philosophy Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Philosophy

  • Comfort And Reliable : Adjustable Hospital Beds

    One can expect a lot from hospitals as they are the places where patients go hoping to cure their illness. Hence hospitals are ought to provide all the comforts that a patient requires. Read

  • How To Choose A Home Care Provider
    By: Yewande D. Awoyemi | Apr 29th 2007
    Before modern medicine, caring for someone medically in the home was quite common, and hospitalization was rare. Today, with a growing trend toward reduced hospital stays, home care is gaining popularity.

    While caregivers of the past were generally family members or friends, home health care today is based mo ...
    Read

  • Home Health Nursing Opportunities
    By: Karen Williams | Apr 24th 2010
    Once upon a time, patients recovering from surgeries or serious illness once spent weeks confined to a hospital bed. These days more and more of them are being sent home early. There are a variety of reasons for the early discharge, including the superior care provided in hospitals today that enables patients to have their ... Read

  • Critical Illness Insurance Developments And Statistics
    By: Mike Armstrong | Oct 4th 2007
    Standard Life one of the most famous insurance companies in the UK had revealed its reports for the year 2005. Around 82 percent of critical illness claims may have been successfully paid since the year 2005 by Standard Life. These claims may have a reached a total of around GBP 20 million. Compared to the year 2004, only a ... Read

  • Low On Health Cover, Big On Small Print
    By: Michael Challiner | Dec 18th 2008
    The need for clarity and honesty when writing critical illness policies. This article explains. Read

  • Healthcare For Long-term Patients: Is This Insurance Right For You?
    By: golkow | Sep 27th 2009
    A long term insurance demands the payment of premium until the death of a person. A major disadvantaged with the increasing prices as different companies offer different kinds of coverage and wanted to raise funds for the bills.

    Read

  • Edema And Adjustable Beds

    Sometimes fluid accumulates between the cells in the soft tissue. This condition is called as Edema. "Accumulation of fluids" is not the complete description of the disease. Read

  • Pregnancy Swelling And Effective Herbal Remedies For Reduce Swelling
    By: Dr. Lee Mikal | Jun 9th 2010
    Swelling is the swelling of organs, skin, or other body parts. It is caused by build up of fluid in the tissues. The extra fluid can lead to a rapid add to in weight over a short period of time (days to weeks).

    There are two basic types of swelling a person may knowledge: pitting edema and nonpitting edema.
    Read

  • Suicidal Tendencies Among Chantix Side Effects
    By: Alan Haburchak | Feb 20th 2008
    Chantix is a smoking cessation drug that recently came under fire for its association with several suicides of users. The drug is becoming associated with severe side effects such as depression, erratic behavior, suicidal thoughts and tendencies. The FDA is currently studying the drug, patients taking the drug and who have ... Read

  • Restoring The Health Care Market System
    By: Leonard C Tekaat | Jun 25th 2009
    Before health insurance use became wide spread, the market determined prices. The doctor would determine what price he could provide the service for. The patient would determine if he/she was willing and able to pay the price. When a third party became involved, such as an insurance company or the government, the price rose ... Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy