Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Scars to your beautiful

I was irritated as I looked down at my phone, blinking in the sunlight. I was out for a walk with my baby, whom I barely get to see during the week, and he had just fallen asleep. So there he was, peaceful and cherubic in my arms, as I basked in his little-ness, and now, suddenly and most maddeningly, in the midst of this tranquility, my phone was ringing. The voicemail came through mere seconds later, followed by a text – CALL ME YOUR PATIENT ATTEMPTED SUICIDE.

All caps. No punctuation. Nothing else.

I could feel the color draining from my face; my entire body now puddling around my feet. I was numb.

What?

I frantically started dialing, my nervous fingers fumbling with the phone, accidentally hitting the baby in the face – his nap be damned now – all while running through my list of patients in my head. Was it the the patient I had deemed safe to discharge to shelter despite their claims of suicidal ideation if they didn’t have permanent housing, or the patient who denied having any psychiatric symptoms, but my spidey sense had warned me that he just wanted out to get his next drug fix, or was it the teenager whom we had just diagnosed with likely some psychotic disorder or at the very best, something on the bipolar spectrum - -- my mind was racing, all while it felt like time was progressing at a snail’s pace.

Thanks for calling back Michelle – came the unusually terse greeting from my boss. Did you see this patient?  She described my elderly and cachectic patient with end stage liver disease. My patient who had looked at us aghast when we asked if he had thoughts of wanting to kill himself and then quoted Scripture, informing us that such a thing is a sin in the eyes of God. My patient who readily admitted to being depressed and worried about weighing down his devoted family with his medical needs, but found solace in his faith, and found comfort in speaking with us, with the chaplain, with his pastor, requesting no medications, just therapy please. My patient who had spoken with us openly about all of this while his wife and daughter sat by his hospital bed, helping him bring spoonfuls of soup to his mouth, fluffing the bedsheets around him, as he was so weak he couldn’t even pull his blankets up to his chin.

No no no. I must have read the text wrong. There was no way this patient could have attempted suicide.

No, he did. He put a belt around his neck and then tied it to the bed frame.

What?! I asked again, flabbergasted. There was literally no way.

But yet, apparently there was.

Oh my god.

My mind immediately started spinning off in a new direction, quickly covering what ifs, coulda, shoulda, wouldas, and if only’s. What had I done wrong? We used a phone translator, and there were times when I wondered if we were getting the full story, as our patient would seemingly talk for a while, and the interpreter would translate a short sentence. But his family had sat there, unperturbed. Wait, maybe was it because his family was at bedside? But I had returned when his family was gone, and the patient had continued to endorse the same beliefs and ideas about wanting to die naturally, about his faith being comforting to him, etc. He had seemed a bit more curt, but I had figured it was due to his reluctance to being interviewed again with a phone translator, which admittedly has long wait times and the occasional dropped call. And he had smiled indulgently at me when I apologized for the poor phone connection that made the interpreter ask him to repeat everything he said.

My boss was still talking to me, but to be honest, I could barely register what she was saying. My mind was screaming with the one question I wanted her to answer. I had to interrupt.

Is he okay?

I blurted it out, and my voice cracked as I asked.

Yes, he’s on a psychiatric hold now with a sitter at bedside.

The breath I was unconsciously holding came rushing out.

I deal with suicide risk stratification every day when I’m at work. Static risk factors, dynamic risk factors, protective factors, means, ability, firearm possession. All of that boils down to our overall suicide risk assessment. Yes, he was an older man. Yes, he was hopeless, with significant pain related to a serious medical condition. Yes, he endorsed wanting to be dead. But he didn’t have a plan, he didn’t have any means (or so we thought), and he was actively involved with planning for the future, and he had significant religious factors at play. All of this weighed with and against each other, and we had deemed him to be a low suicide risk.

Yet all of this doesn’t matter if someone truly wants to kill himself. In fact, there have been reports of how once someone makes up his mind to suicide, the mood actually lifts in a way. There is now an endpoint, a purpose, a direction for their seemingly otherwise meaningless pain.  Was this what happened?

In the next few days we had family meetings, multiple discussions with the patient alone and with the family, and among our own care team. We saw a different side to our patient. He was less smiley and more snarly. Frustrated with being in the hospital, frustrated with his pain and the lack of relief that the medications gave, he would occasionally try to throw things at us when we came to talk to him. It came out that in the family’s culture, when a person is dying he or she attempts to push away loved ones in order to make the impending death easier on those who will be left in the land of the living. Was that the underlying irritability lurking behind his smiles and pleasantries? Or was that just plain ol’ irritability seen in depression? Was it encephalopathy or psychotic depression when he accused his family members of being devils? His family felt that his behavior was his way of getting us to leave him, to stop treatment, so that he could meet his Maker on his own terms. Was it cultural, or was it suicide?


I guess I’ll never truly know. 

What I do know however is this. Despite his attempts at pushing us away, to make it easier for us to forget him when he dies, he has accomplished the exact opposite for me. I will remember him. Each time I do a suicide risk assessment, I will see his smiling gaunt face quoting a Bible verse at me. I will see that face juxtaposed with the image I conjured up in my head when I first heard that he had put a belt around his neck.

And hopefully, this will push me to push more. To delve more. To prod a little bit more. Because if I had known about this cultural belief, maybe I could have confronted those thoughts. Challenged them a little. 

Maybe it wouldn't have changed anything. But that maybe is the sticking point, and the part that is going to stick with me.