MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR:
AVOIDING THE MILLION-DOLLAR DEATH


SYNOPSIS: 

    Medical science and technology have now advanced so far in the West
that it is quite common for patients to be 'treated-to-death'.
Because it is always possible to apply one more treatment,
some specialist will suggest trying something new.
And new treatments might be used until someone says "enough".

    A Medical Futility Monitor would be a compassionate doctor
with many years of experience in terminal care.
She (or he) would apply information contained in a world-wide data-base
for the purpose of evaluating any proposed medical treatment.

    The Medical Futility Monitor would issue written recommendations.
And if these were not followed,
the Medical Futility Monitor would have the power to 'pull the plug'
for patients who will no longer benefit from medical treatment.
Supportive care will be provided until natural death.
Careful safeguards should be used for making all life-ending decisions.

OUTLINE:

1.  WHICH DOCTORS WOULD BECOME THE BEST MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITORS?

2.  THE MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR WOULD BE EMPLOYED BY THE HOSPITAL.

3.  AVOIDING THE MILLION-DOLLAR DEATH.

4.  A WORLD-WIDE DATA-BASE OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF TREATMENTS.

5.  HOW WILL THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE MFM BE IMPLEMENTED?

6.  THE MFM HAS FINAL AUTHORITY TO 'PULL THE PLUG'.

7.  THE SAFEGUARDS
MOST LIKELY TO BE USED BY A MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR.

8.  USUALLY THE FAMILY WILL DECIDE TO END TREATMENT.

9.  SOMETIMES THE MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR WILL MOVE ON TO OTHER CASES.





MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR:
AVOIDING THE MILLION-DOLLAR DEATH


by James Leonard Park

    During most of the life of the human species on the planet Earth
(which is about 7 million years
since human ancestors branched off from the other large apes),
there has been too little medical care.
In fact, scientific medical care has only been possible for the last 350 years.
And then, only in the 20th century did modern medical technology
really come into its own.

    But now
at least in the Westa new problem has arisen:
too much medical treatment
.
Because modern hospitals do in fact have the capacity
to replace almost all of the natural functions of the human body,
this technology will often be used on each patient
until that patient dies, still connected to the 'tubes and machines'.

    Terminating useless medical treatments is a well-established option,
but should
it be organized as a new specialty in medicine?
Are the patient, the family, & the treating doctors so close to the situation
that they cannot be rational about the best time to terminate treatment?
Could help in decision-making be embodied in a medical professional
whose only role is to evaluate the efficacy of treatments already tried
and all possible new treatments that might be proposed?




1.  WHICH DOCTORS WOULD BECOME
            THE BEST MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITORS?


    A Medical Futility Monitor is an MD
with at least 30 years experience in terminal care.
Because of the fear of applying mindless abstractions to actual patients,
the Medical Futility Monitor should be a female doctor.
This would counteract the worry that a 'bean-counting administrator'
might have the power to say when medical treatment should end.

    Becoming a Medical Futility Monitor would thus not be a specialty
that one could train for in medical school.
This is a specialty that might emerge near the end of one's medical career.
Because it takes so many years of training just to begin a career as an MD,
the usual length of that career is about 30-40 years.

    The doctor who has practiced bedside medicine
with actual dying patients for at least 30 years
would have a wealth of experience with dying patients and their families.
She would be able to handle the interpersonal dimensions
of exploring the most relevant end-of-life questions.

    Becoming a Medical Futility Monitor would be a second medical career,
lasting as long as the doctor is still able to review life-ending decisions.
A Medical Futility Monitor would be an advisor
to patients, their families, and to the doctors providing terminal care.
The primary-care physician is often so responsible for the dying patient
that he or she must be available at any time.
This sometimes results in an exhausting schedule of work.
Returning to medical practice as a Medical Futility Monitor
would be a regular salaried position with a 40-hour work-week.

    The process of evaluating the efficacy of terminal care
will not be an instant-by-instant decision-process
—as exemplified in its most extreme form in the emergency room.
Rather, the Medical Futility Monitor will be doing
careful and reflective background research,
meeting with the patient and/or the family
probably over a period of weeks rather than hours.




2.  THE MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR
            WOULD BE EMPLOYED BY THE HOSPITAL.


    In order to simplify the process and to make sure of the lines of authority,
the Medical Futility Monitor would not be paid
from the funds provided for the medical care of the patient.
Rather, the MFM would be a professional employee of the hospital
or other medical institution that is providing terminal care.

    Thus, the MFM would be parallel to the hospital administrator
and other professional staff who make sure
that the best medical care is provided to all patients.

    Seen in the total budget of the hospital,
the Medical Futility Monitor would not add to the costs,
since much of her work would result in less medical treatment for the patient.
And some of this useless terminal care was being paid by the hospital
because the patient had no medical insurance.

    For each day of useless care that can be omitted,
the medical costs will be a few thousand dollars less.
Such savings somewhere in the system of paying for medical care
will more than cover the salary of the Medical Futility Monitor.




3.  AVOIDING THE MILLION-DOLLAR DEATH.

    Under the standard medical procedures of the recent past,
it was common for terminal care to be extended for months and even years,
so that the total costs mounted to more than one million dollars.
The predictable outcome was the same: death.
But the process was long and drawn-out
because the terminal care was handled by so many specialists,
each giving attention to only one bodily system
but no one decisively taking responsibility for the life of the patient.

    Once the patient has been admitted to an advanced hospital system,
the process of care sometimes goes on automatic pilot:
Everyone is employed in familiar procedures,
all of which are intended to save the patient from death.

    The billing department could probably give a total
for the expenses already incurred,
but usually these are behind-the-scenes accounting
not known to the people who are providing the care
and not known to the patient and/or the family.
And sometimes only the insurance company knows
how much has been paid out for this patient
because there might be several different agencies and institutions
asking to be paid for whatever they have provided.

    Only some months after the death has occurred
will it be possible to add up the total cost for this terminal care.

    Cost will be a factor in the deliberations of the Medical Futility Monitor.
But an even more immediate question will be:
What benefits are being provided for the patient
by means of the present and proposed medical treatments?




4.  A WORLD-WIDE DATA-BASE
            OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF TREATMENTS.


    The Medical Futility Monitor will have at her fingertips
a data-base of information gathered from all similar cases
wherever such patients have been treated anywhere in the advanced world.
This is a perspective not usually employed by the treating doctors.
They are so focused on saving this particular patient
that they do not know what the probability of success might be.

    But computers can collect data too vast to be contained in a human mind.
The Medical Futility Monitor will be able to type into her computer
more specific facts about the patient whose care is being reviewed.
When the closest parallels have been discovered,
the outcomes of various medical treatments can be summarized.
The statistical data must never make the final decisions,
but the facts about similar cases form the background
for making decisions for the specific patient
who is receiving well-defined medical care
or who might receive such treatments.

    Experimental treatments should never be discounted,
especially when the patient has only one, very specific, medical problem.
If the patient is otherwise in good health,
then an organ-transplant might solve all of his or her medical troubles.

    But terminal care of patients who are in the last years of their lives
usually includes several parallel medical problems being treated at once.
Each such medical problem has been solved in other patients.
But has any patient recovered from
having all of the same problems simultaneously?


    And there will be even more obvious cases,
such as patients in persistent vegetative state (PVS),
whose bodies depend on life-support systems.
Even when surgeons suggest hip-replacement or removing another tumor,
the fact the patient will never return to life outside of the hospital
should be taken into account by someone.
And that someone might be the Medical Futility Monitor.

    One of the most relevant places for the MFM to do her work
would be the life-support ward of the hospital.
Such special buildings or wings of the hospital
are devoted exclusively to long-term patients
who are being sustained by various forms of life-support
feeding-tubes, respirators, drugs, etc.
Only a few will ever recover enough to leave the hospital.
Because no one wants to make life-ending decisions,
the patients are sustained indefinitely by life-supports.
But a Medical Futility Monitor could offer a new perspective.
Whatever the other doctors are recommending
and whatever the family wants,
the Medical Futility Monitor could explain to everyone
the most likely future for each specific patient.

    This work would be very relevant for patients in PVS.
Based on the best neurological evaluations,
what should be done for each patient in persistent vegetative state?




5.  HOW WILL THE
RECOMMENDATIONS
            OF THE MFM BE IMPLEMENTED?


    When the Medical Futility Monitor evaluates the terminal care,
she (or he) is free to come to any conclusion based on the evidence.
She will be completely independent of the patient and family,
independent of the doctors (both primary-care physicians and specialists),
and independent of any other medical or financial systems.

    The Medical Futility Monitor will issue conclusions as of a certain date.
She should include the impact of possible future developments.
For example, she might say that
if the patient continues to be unconscious for another month
and if there are no other changes,
then all treatments should be stopped.

    This report will become a permanent part of the medical record.
And it will be shared with everyone making decisions for this patient,
including the patient himself or herself
to whatever degree he or she is still able to understand what is happening.

    The deciders should be given enough time to assimilate the information.
And usually they will take the necessary medical decisions
without any further input from the Medical Futility Monitor.
In other words, the Medical Futility Monitor can recommend
ending all medical treatments as of a specific date.




6.  THE MFM HAS FINAL AUTHORITY TO 'PULL THE PLUG'.

    However, if the deciders fail to follow the recommendations of the MFM,
then the MFM should have the authority to begin a process
of fulfilling safeguards for life-ending decisions on her own.
The specific facts about each patient will dictate which safeguards to use.
And the deciders might already have fulfilled some of these safeguards
such as getting more medical evaluations and recommendations
in their own process of exploring their medical options.

    When sufficient safeguards have been fulfilled,
and if the deciders still fail to carry out the obvious life-ending decisions,
then the MFM should have the necessary authority to 'pull the plug' herself.

    In order to prevent mistakes,
a resisting family does have the possibility of delaying the death
if there might be a judicial review of the life-ending decision.
But under all normal circumstances, any judicial review
will only determine that the appropriate safeguards were carefully fulfilled.
And therefore, the judge will not reverse or delay the life-ending decisions.

    The detailed work of the Medical Futility Monitor
will shorten the legal processes seen in some early right-to-die cases.
The medical record will already show the medical facts,
which could be summarized by the Medical Futility Monitor.
Consequently, there will be little original work for the courts to do.
And in the vast majority of cases,
the death-planning record created by the Medical Futility Monitor
will be so thoro that no court will have any reason even to take the case.
In other words, the recommendations of the MFM will be followed. 




7.  THE SAFEGUARDS
MOST LIKELY TO BE USED
            BY A MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR.


    The following 13 safeguard-procedures for life-ending decisions
are the most relevant ones from the 26 recommended safeguards:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/aws-website-jamesleonardpark---freelibrary-3puxk/SG-A-Z.html
The letters at the beginning of each safeguard are retained.
And each safeguard is linked to its complete explanation on the Internet.

A. ADVANCE DIRECTIVE FOR MEDICAL CARE

    If the patient himself or herself has created an Advance Directive,
then there might be an explicit rejection of futile medical care.
While still in good health, what did the patient write about terminal care?
What financial limits did the patient include?
How does the over-all philosophy expressed in the Advance Directive
apply to the specific situation at hand?

C. REQUESTS FOR DEATH FROM THE PATIENT

    If the patient has made any explicit, recordable requests for death,
these should be given special weight
by those who must now make terminal-care decisions.
Are treatments being continued against the express wishes of the patient?

E. PHYSICIAN'S STATEMENT OF CONDITION AND PROGNOSIS

    If there is no written statement of the medical condition of the patient,
the Medical Futility Monitor can request such a document.
The medical facts form the foundation for any determination of futility.

F. INDEPENDENT PHYSICIAN REVIEWS THE CONDITION AND PROGNOSIS

    And especially since death cannot be reversed,
a second professional recommendation should be written
by another doctor who has independently examined the patient.

G. CERTIFICATION OF TERMINAL ILLNESS OR INCURABLE CONDITION

    If the doctors have officially declared the patient to be dying,
this fact will support terminating treatments.
The doctors who create such a declaration of terminal illness
are saying that no matter what future treatments are tried,
this patient is already on a downward pathway
towards a death that cannot be avoided.

H. UNBEARABLE SUFFERING

    If the patient is obviously in pain
and all efforts to alleviate that suffering have failed,
this will be further reason to decide that this life is over. 
Further treatments will not only be useless,
but they might also extend the torment of the patient.

J. PALLIATIVE CARE TRIAL

    If the patient has already tried various methods of relieving suffering,
this part of the medical record will also be relevant
for evaluating further efforts to relieve the terminal symptoms.

K. INFORMED CONSENT FROM THE PATIENT

    If the patient is still able to make meaningful medical decisions,
then the written and signed informed consent from the patient
will be the most dramatic proof
that terminating treatment is the wisest course of action.

L. REQUESTS FOR DEATH FROM THE PROXIES

    And if the patient can no longer make meaningful life-ending decisions,
then the official requests for death from the duly-authorized proxies
will be further support for taking the actions
that will allow the patient's life to end.

N. STATEMENTS FROM HOSPITAL OR HOSPICE STAFF MEMBERS

    The Medical Futility Monitor might also gather expressions of opinion
from the people who are most closely involved in the care of the patient.
Do they also agree (based on their experience with similar patients)
that further medical treatments would not be useful?

O. STATEMENTS FROM FAMILY MEMBERS
            AFFIRMING OR QUESTIONING CHOOSING DEATH

    Sometimes family members will also give their personal opinions
about the terminal care of the patient.
Any such statements should also be included in the report of the MFM.

P. A MEMBER OF THE CLERGY
            APPROVES OR QUESTIONS CHOOSING DEATH

    Also, if a clergy-person selected by the patient and/or the family
has written a statement about the proposed death,
this will be further support for any decision by the Medical Futility Monitor
that additional medical treatments would not be meaningful.

R. AN INSTITUTIONAL ETHICS COMMITTEE
            REVIEWS THE PLANS FOR DEATH

    When the medical institution providing care has an ethics committee,
the written conclusions of any such deliberations
should also be included in the report of the Medical Futility Monitor.


    The Medical Futility Monitor will select which of the possible safeguards
are most relevant for the patient whose life-and-death are being considered.
And if these 13 procedures do not yield an obvious conclusion,
then there are 13 more possible safeguards that might be applied:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/aws-website-jamesleonardpark---freelibrary-3puxk/SG-A-Z.html




8.  USUALLY THE FAMILY WILL DECIDE TO END TREATMENT.

    Since the family will be aware of the work of the Medical Futility Monitor,
in most cases, the reasonable recommendations by the MFM
will lead the patient, the proxies, or other family members to decide
to authorize the termination of treatments, resulting in the patient's death.
The length of time before death will depend on the specific life-supports:
If a respirator was keeping the patient alive, death will come immediately.
If a feeding-tube was sustaining life, then death will come in a few days.
If drugs were keeping something in balance,
the doctors will be able to predict how quickly
the natural processes of the body will shut down
in the absence of these chemical supports.




9.  SOMETIMES THE MEDICAL FUTILITY MONITOR
            WILL MOVE ON TO OTHER CASES.


    Whenever there are differences of opinion,
the MFM might just leave the recorded opinion in the medical record
and move on to other cases of possible useless medical treatment.
There will always be more than enough cases to occupy the MFM.
Even if her recommendations are not followed in one case,
her work will still be effective in other cases.
In retrospect, the abandoned cases will result in later deaths
after a few more days, weeks, or months of useless medical procedures.
And as the public learns of this new dimension of terminal care,
they will be more ready to accept the conclusions
of this new profession
the Medical Futility Monitor.



Created June 24, 2009; Revised 7-1-2009; 7-2-2009; 7-8-2009; 4-23-2010; 3-6-2011; 12-3-2011;
3-24-2013; 10-11-2013; 8-5-2014; 1-24-2015; 5-29-2015; 7-2-2015;
12-22-2016; 1-31-2018; 8-29-2018; 6-5-2019; 7-21-2020;



AUTHOR:

    James Park has written extensively about end-of-life issues.
Some related on-line essays are linked below.
Everything else you might like to know about him
will be discovered on his website:
James Leonard Park—Free Library




    Here are a few related essays on-line:

Losing the Marks of Personhood:
Discussing Degrees of Mental Decline

Advance Directives for Medical Care:
24 Important Questions to Answer

Fifteen Safeguards for Life-Ending Decisions

Four Medical Methods of Managing Death

Pulling the Plug:
A Paradigm for Life-Ending Decisions

VDD:
Why Giving Up Water is Better than other Means of Voluntary Death

Voluntary Death by Dehydration:
Safeguards to Make Sure it is a Wise Choice

Choosing Your Date of Death:
How to Achieve a Timely Death
Not too Soon, Not too Late




Several on-line essays have now been collected into an Internet Book:
Controlling Health-Care Costs.
The essay above on Medical Futility Monitors is Chapter 6.



    Further Reading:


Books on Medical Futility

Best Books on Voluntary Death


Best Books on Preparing for Death

Books on Terminal Care (from the Doctor's Point of View)

Terminal Medical Care from the Consumer's Point of View


Medical Methods of Choosing Death


Books on Helping Patients to Die


Books Supporting the Right-to-Die

Books Opposing the Right-to-Die


One book on guidelines for ending medical treatment:

How to Die: Safeguards for Life-Ending Decisions.



Go to the Right-to-Die Portal.


Return to the DEATH page.


Go to the Medical Ethics index page.


Go to other on-line essays by James Park,
organized into 10 subject-areas.


Go to the beginning of this website
James Leonard Park—Free Library