From the Journals

Lancet Commission reexamines the current approach to death


 

FROM THE LANCET

“The story of dying in the 21st century is a story of paradox.” This is the opening line of a report recently published in the Lancet, in which the Lancet Commission experts tackle what is, for many, a very sensitive topic: the end of life. The recommendations they present aim at “bringing death back into life.”

What makes the story a paradox is that, in end-of-life situations, many people are overtreated, and on the other hand, many people are undertreated.

In short, when all is said and done, “people die bad deaths.” A natural event, a natural part of life, has turned into something that people fear or, in some cases, refuse to even acknowledge or talk about.

This was the motivating factor for the Lancet Commission, a group of experts from various disciplines, to come together to try to better understand this complex concept. They called on the general public, health care professionals, and policy makers to change the approach to end-of-life matters so that there can be a balance between death and dying, as well as a balance between life and death.

This sensitive topic was explored by Marina Sozzi, PhD. She is the director of the Association for the Support and Assistance of People With Chronic and Oncological Diseases, a nonprofit organization that for more than 30 years has been dedicated to “providing palliative care and supporting individuals with oncological or other chronic and degenerative diseases.”

Call for rebalancing

To give people an idea of a better system in which life and death are in balance, the Lancet Commission experts described a realistic utopia, which they summarized in the following five principles:

  • The social determinants of death, dying, and grieving are confronted.
  • Dying is understood to be a relational and spiritual process rather than simply a physiological event.
  • Networks of care provide support for people who are dying, those caring for them, and those grieving.
  • Conversations and stories about everyday death, dying, and grief become common.
  • Death is recognized as having value.

Achieving this utopia will not be easy, especially considering the current systems that are in place. “There have been tremendous medical advances over the last hundred years, particularly in increasing life expectancy and curing diseases that were once considered death sentences,” Dr. Sozzi explained. “Indeed, over the course of that time period, medical science acquired an enormous degree of social power, and matters of death – which in previous centuries had been within the purview of religions and houses of worship – were handed over to be handled by doctors and nurses.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has made the medical field’s role in matters of death more prominent: every day, people saw footage of dying people in hospital beds being cared for by health care professionals in masks and gowns. These patients were otherwise alone, their only contact with loved ones being over the phone or online. They died the ultimate medicalized deaths, stripped of almost all opportunities to get emotional support from family and friends.

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