Private-Mini-Memorials
I joined the primary care practice at the University of Chicago in 1997. I thought Iād be here for three years, until my wife finished her training. My practice quickly filled with the people who needed to start seeing a general internist, mostly people in their 50s and 60s. I didnāt move after 3 years, or 5 years, or 10 years. As I push up against 30 years, many of the people I started caring for in the late ā90s still see me. Although I havenāt aged a single day, these patients are now in their 70s, 80s, and 90s. There are even a few who have reached their 11th decade. Here is the Age/Gender column from my Epic schedule on the day I begin writing this post.1 The one thing guaranteed to happen to all of us eventually, despite what the longevity gurus might tell us, is that we die. It is fortunate that Iāve had decades of experience before my practice reached its current level of maturity, as I am not sure Iād have been able to tolerate the frequency of deaths early in my career, when I blamed myself for every untoward event. Iāve written about how I feel when a patient dies. Iāve also written about saving the face-sheets of all the patients I have lost. This is about a way of memorializing patients that I have, only recently, stumbled into. I almost always receive some documentation of the lives of my patients after they die. Sometimes these are emails from the University memorializing a former faculty member. Sometimes these are memorial pamphlets from a funeral. When I donāt receive anything, I usually search for obituaries. Although it may sound morbid, I treasure reading about the lives of my former patients. These pieces are usually written by those who loved them, learned from them, respected them. After reading them, I usually spend a few minutes thinking about my relationship with the person I knew. My mini-personal-memorial service ends with snapping the face sheet and the obituary ā broadly defined ā into my Memory Binder. I never leave this private mini-memorial service without feeling like I didnāt know my patient well enough. The āsocial historiesā that I bury in epic usually say something like: Retired English professor (Quantrell awardee) Grew up in Brooklyn (Prospect Lefferts Gardens) St. Annās, Smith, Harvard Married to SW 3 kids, live in NY, DC, and Austin Or Originally from Mississippi Moved to Chicago in 1960s for work Worked in steel and automotive Married over 60 years Grandchildren: ātoo many to countā These summaries are embarrassing, the encapsulation of a life in a 5-line doggerel. They are meant to jog my memory about who a person is for the first couple of visits. With time, I learn more, but seldom update the social history; there is no need. Iāll hear about hobbies and vacations. I come to understand how people relate to healthcare in general and to me in particular. I see how they deal with disease and progressive disability. I learn about the important relationships in their lives. We often discuss end-of-life plans. What I learn from obituaries is all that I missed. Early career accomplishments, hobbies, volunteering, and interests that enriched lives but never came up in the office. Their qualities for which they were identified and loved. My job as a doctor, even a primary care doctor, is to care for, and about, people. My job is not to be their friends. Although that sometimes happens ā as we get older, more of our patients become friends and more of our friends become patients ā mostly, my relationship is close enough to engage in collegial patient care, the shared decision-making that most of us, patient and doctor, aim to achieve. Still, I regret not having known more about what amazing people my patients were when I knew them. 1 Youād think, from this schedule, that I see mostly men. It is a limited sample. My practice is about 50/50.
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