Life After Quadriplegia- Can Healthcare Do Better?
10 years ago my mother became a #quadriplegic after falling from a horse. Her journey was & is part of my inspiration for blogging.
My mother, now 78, is still a quad. But she continues working as a Professor, both teaching undergraduates and making #art (www.sheilapitt.com). She’s had a couple of near death experiences (literally) but keeps on getting up & inspiring others every day.
At the time of her accident I wrote a piece about my perceptions of her journey as a physician. Since her accident 10 years ago #healthcare is …about the same- broken. We care for the acutely ill but largely ignore chronic illness. Tools enabling patient and families to engage, our largest untapped resource, remain outside conventional care, largely not reimbursed, and by default, largely primitive.
Given her 10 years, fighting the good fight every day, I thought to re-share this piece. Doctors and hospitals aren’t going to solve the healthcare crisis. We need entrepreneurs and investors to rethink how we care for each other.
The Apex of Care
I am a successful physician at the #Barrow Neurological Institute (BNI), the U.S largest hospital for neurological disease. Every year we take care of thousands of patients with brain tumors, epilepsy and spinal cord injuries to name a few. There is process to care for these patients referred to as best practice. We hope to optimize their outcome while they are in our care. I am also the son of a quadriplegic, Sheila Pitt.
Here is some background on my mother. She has always been a strong, independent person. Growing up she successfully competed in women’s gymnastics. She wanted to go into art, but that was not an acceptable career for a good Jewish girl in the 50’s. Her father suggested she was better suited to be a teacher. After marrying, she pursued a fairly traditional life as a spouse and mother.
After we moved to Arizona in the early seventies she developed a passion for horses. She was an Equestrian. She began riding in her 30’s and continued in the sport for over 35 years reaching a high level of competition.
In her forties she also went back and pursued her dream of becoming an artist. She got her MFA at the University of Arizona. She received tenure in her late forties and was made head of the printmaking department at the University of Arizona. Her work has been shown at national and international shows. She was also asked to advise the undergraduate studies program for the department, managing over 750 undergraduates. She was elected to the Faculty Senate. She is no wall flower.
The day of her accident was a bit bizarre. I was participating in a new building dedication. Most of the neurosurgery department was in attendance. Late Saturday morning, I got a call from my sister. She wanted to tell me mom had an accident. She had fallen from her horse and the paramedics were there. I didn’t think much of it, but was able to reach another friend at the scene who put me through to the paramedics. She was complete from the neck down. I collapsed in front of 50 of my peers.
“Complete” is a term in neurosurgical terminology meaning the patient isn’t moving below a certain level- neck, chest ,waist- and really isn’t supposed to move ever again- they are complete.
Within 8 hours I had her helicoptered to my hospital 100 miles north. By midnight she was in the operating room with one of my close friends and best spine surgeons in the country, Dr. Nick Theodore. I honestly believe my mother’s functional status would not be as high without this prompt intervention.
As a senior physician at the BNI, I was able to guide much of my mother’s course through the ICU, step down and rehabilitation facility. Another friend, Dr Rick Su, prevented her from requiring a tracheostomy by patiently monitoring her respiratory status at a critical time. This procedure involving a breathing tube inserted into her neck, would have meant several months of additional recovery.
When she arrived at the rehab floor, Mom had minimal movement in one shoulder, but could breathe on her own. She began a course of aggressive therapy. Therapists worked on her limited strength and function most days.
Occupational therapy was perhaps one disappointment. We wanted to have Mom trained to use voice recognition on the computer. This would enable her to read and respond to email, in essence, get her closer to reintegration with activities of daily living. We were told they did not have the staff to train her on the computer and would only offer skills for her to type the keys with a pencil. We arranged for a local high school to volunteer. Students would offer computer assistance with the software program in exchange for volunteer hours at the facility with my mother and other patients having similar injuries who asked for help. It would be a win-win. This opportunity was passively refused by the hospital occupational therapy supervisor.
She spent several months there with some gains. She was able to push up her glasses with one arm. However, after a while, she wanted to go back to Tucson. Her husband and friends were there. Phoenix was not her home.
The Base
As a quadriplegic the only place in Tucson meeting her medical requirements and that her insurance would pay for was the county nursing home. This is a clean but rather Spartan facility. The staff was nice but limited, and the physician rarely seen. She was placed in a room with roommate. This woman had been in a chronic vegetative state (most would call it brain dead) for 15 years with no chance of recovery. All Mom could hear was the in and out of the breathing machine. Although she said this was a plus (she didn’t have to be bothered by idle conversation), I know this wore on her.
It felt like a dream to me. She showed tremendous strength. One minute she was a professor in front of students. A horse stumbles and she is unable to move or reach a call button. The person next to her was one in name only. After another month, custom changes to her home were completed. She left the nursing home and remains at home today. She has 2 care providers on any given day.
Whereas I could monitor and optimize my mother’s care at the BNI, in her new surroundings I am largely reduced to a family member. Certainly other care providers make themselves available to me. However, largely her care is reduced to the base – self driven and self monitored with no real “captain” of her ship. She has a multitude of providers – a urologist, a neurologist, a physiatrist. Each deals with individual issues they are comfortable handling. There is no individual overseeing the care process. This is largely the responsibility of my mother and her husband. Like most people with chronic illness, they have discovered their own solutions, ways to solve problems they encounter with drugs, services and insurers. She has a marker board for her list of medications and appointments. Although we all have financial worries, hers seem somewhat more acute and ever present.
After much cajoling, she returned to work last September. She teaches a full class at the University of Arizona on printmaking (see picture below). She asked for and received a student helper in the classroom and one to assist her in making art in her studio from the university’s disabilities resource center. She has had to be creative in the process. She participates in the process but needs to be collaborative. I have asked her to write a piece on how the process of art has changed for her – both as an able bodied person and now as one with disability. She is thinking about it.
Her health remains good. She deals with occasional spells related to body temperature regulation and hypotension, but overall has not had common complications of many quadriplegics.
I would like to make one final comment regarding quadriplegia. The word “complete” is a misleading term that should be abandoned. On hearing this term, many of the nurses we met at the Barrow gave up on my mother assuming she would never get any further recovery. Patients with cord injuries are not complete or incomplete. They are transected (the cord has been cut) or they have an injured but intact cord remaining. There is no way to know at the time of an acute event whether the cord is cut or simply injured without advanced imaging. For those that are not transected, like my mother, every day is a chance to get a new skill, to recover lost functionality. Hope is a powerful motivator.
Replacing the shoebox and other issues for the future
Along with my clinical responsibilities, I do research related to the nexus between humans and computers, asking how data and process can be captured to improve care. I have a particular interest in tools enabling patients to participate in the process of wellness. I find it more than a little ironic that my mother continues to use paper and a marker board to manage her care. My mother’s experience reflects some of the basic problems with the current approach to healthcare delivery. In particular, her care was optimized during the acute phase, but is relatively disorganized now that she is coping with a chronic disability. Further, patient and family efforts to optimize care are not supported by participatory tools.
The current administration is spending billions of dollars to improve the healthcare infrastructure. There is an expectation that within 5 years every medical practice, from large hospitals to small clinics will be using some form of electronic record. This should improve care and hopefully reduce costs. However, in many ways, this is more of the same, an effort focused on the provider, the apex.
Patients and their families need a similar effort that is directed at helping them care for themselves. Currently, a shoe box is the best we’ve got. This “box,” full of notes from previous hospitalizations and clinic visits along with CD’s of images, is all too common. The patient comes to clinic, hands over the box and expects the provider to make sense of the records and arrive at a plan moving forward. With most appointments no more than 30 minutes, this is not going to happen. There are a number of companies offering to digitize records. This is not the answer. Providers need relevant summaries, dashboards, of how the patient has been doing.
Solutions need to be transparent. Many people with chronic illness are from a generation that is not comfortable with the internet. Even cell phones are a bit foreign. My father-in-law often uses his cell phone as a one way device. He makes calls and then turns it off to save the battery. My mother is willing to participate, but the process has to meet her workflow. My personal belief is that the TV will be the final common device. Everyone can work a remote. It will work with other devices in the home through Bluetooth. It will remind us when to take pills. It will allow us to meet with our doctor while at home.
The cable box is not a one way device. I Skype with my mother, but she has to turn on the computer, start the application, turn on the camera. She should meet me and others on her healthcare station. Voice recognition software also needs to improve. It is designed for business, but there are other large markets. The software needs to be hands free. She uses it, but not without assistance. Later this year she and I will be experimenting with a new box from Cisco that should get us closer to this vision.
Solutions need to consider the patient’s ecosystem rather than their illness. My mother and I don’t care about quadriplegia, but rather living with quadriplegia – how she copes with the various difficulties in her effort towards wellness. Most approaches do not consider ways to leverage the family and related opportunities or local resources to stay well.
Advanced electronic platforms message or alert a nurse if the patient’s weight, blood pressure or sugar is abnormal. Why are family members not included in the messaging layer? Families are cheap and the most vested in the patient’s well being.
My mother has to find solutions to problems on her own – where to find goods and services, how to deal with common problems. Google Maps can find and rate a restaurant or the nearest gas station. Why not use local based services for physicians, wheel chairs, etc.? I raised this issue with Google Health two years ago…nothing yet.
The patient is the largest untapped resource in the healthcare debate. After all, they are the most vested party, the one with the illness. Providers are merely a part of the process along the way.
If you ever feel like life has overwhelmed you please visit my mother’s website
sheilapitt.com
Physician dedicated to excellence in healthcare
6 年Yes
??CAMPAIGNS ? ? ? ?#LooksLikeMe?? ? ? ? ?#MyResearchLegacy?? ? ? ? ?#NoDataNoTreatment?? ? ? ? ???THEMES ? ? ? ?#CancerEquityForAll?? ? ? ? ?#NHScancer?? ? ? ? ?#BePartOfResearch??
6 年Alan Pitt, M.D.'hospitals aren’t going to solve the healthcare crisis. We need entrepreneurs and investors to rethink how we care for each other' 'patients are the most untapped resource" There's so much I can relate to in this article, thank you very much for writing it. As a patient living with #chronicIllness having been ignored by the system for aprx. 20 years then bounced around the #NHS for another 14 years... ...plus, these last two weeks have been particularly tough - crippled and in chronic pain; even found myself crying in the toilets because I couldn't move my laptop without excruciating pain, ridiculous I know ... then after having my biologics IV drip, followed by my chemo I've spent the last few days with a pounding headache followed by constant vomiting followed by sheer exhaustion I couldn't agree with you more. I must be a fool for thinking the NHS is going to save me or that my doctors are going to save me; no they're not; only I can do that and only innovators can help - are you out there, show yourselveses investors must view with different spectacles Whatever's happening isn't working for a lot of us patients #PatientVlog #PatientPower #MedLearn Thanks Helen Shaw for tagging me in thisp
Medical Malpractice Paralegal
6 年Very informative and thought provoking article.? It's got me thinking after a lifetime of looking at others medical records as well as my own.? Maybe you have helped me?define a need for a better "mousetrap".? Thank you for sharing.
Risk management professional
6 年My husband became quadriplegic 10 years ago and our story is very similar; finding ways ourselves to live our life. There is no one specialized in SCIs in Maine so I've become the expert. However, without an MD after my name, no one takes me seriously. I've prevented pressure ulcers, pneumonia, UTIs, and many other expensive and possibly unnecessary treatments. I fix wheelchairs, act as a therapist and case manager and yet, too the medical community, I'm just his wife and POA. This experience has helped me as a Risk Manager and given me a great viewpoint. Healthcare won't change until we listen and accept the patient's perspective and thoughts.