FROM THE EDITOR'S PEN
/Wish Fulfillment /
Editorial List
This past weekend I went to the hospital. Actually, I was in a
local hospital’s conference center speaking to caregivers at the
Scleroderma Foundation’s annual South Florida conference. But
the way I was feeling, I wish I was sleeping upstairs in one of
the rooms. (Or since it was a hospital, at least trying to
sleep.) Yet, not even my annual change of season head cold
could keep me away from this appointment. I don’t know of
anyone who has ever been able to say “no” to our host, Ruth
Greenspan. An indomitable 90 year old force of nature with more
energy than I will ever posses, good friend and Master of
Ceremonies, Ruth makes it easy to figure out when you have gone
over your allotted speaking time. When Ruth starts to take the
walk from her seat to the stage, you know that you’d better wrap
it up, and quick.
As with most of the conferences I have ever
attended, the participants at this event were dealing with
multiple care issues; caring for spouses and children with
Scleroderma, parents with Alzheimer’s, diabetes and strokes and
of course, handling their own care issues at the same time. A
true “Club Sandwich Generation” crowd. So it was not a real
surprise when the conversation came around to the subject of
Living Wills. I was particularly taken with one caregiver who
raised her hand and said that although she is in favor of
Advanced Directives, her wish was to not fill out a DNR (Do Not
Resituate) form and that all measures were to be taken no matter
what medical condition she was in at the time.
I had to stop and think about it for a
moment, but she was absolutely right. So much of the
conversation on Advanced Directives I have heard over the past
few years has to do with a loved one’s decision to have a say in
the conversation when “enough is enough.” But, if the family
has had an open and honest conversation about a loved one’s
wishes (or your wishes, for that matter) and a decision has been
reached, then whatever their choice is, it should be respected
and adhered to when the situation arises. If that preference
goes against the grain of the rest of the family, so be it. If
your loved one was medically and legally able to make the
decision regarding his or her end of life care and if all
parties have been heard before the paperwork had been signed,
then exercising their wishes at the appropriate time is truly
where you can show your love for your loved one by allowing them
to have their voice be heard at a time they need it most.
Gary Barg
Editor-in-Chief
gary@caregiver.com