David Cox

David Cox
Location
Powder Springs, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 16
Company
Pleasant
Bio
I have always been described as a person of artistic temperament or was autistic? In either case I completed my first major artistic work at aged six, a mural eight feet in width and eight feet in height. It received mixed reviews by the critics, my father thought I should be richly compensated with a spanking. While in my mother's more critical view, appreciated my concept of scale and also of rage. I continued my artistic endeavors throughout school specializing in faculty caricatures While I achieved some notoriety in these endeavors it did not give me the attention I was seeking. My parents on several occasions were asked by faculty members to come and discuss how such talent would appear in a child so young. Through no small measure on behalf of my teachers I was taught my letters and became an elementary school writer of some acclaim. They had erred, they had taught this boy a word, a word that should have been kept secret from him. This word should have been granted to him only after graduation in a sealed envelope, the word was satire!

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Salon.com
AUGUST 1, 2009 11:27AM

The Gate Keepers of Death

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Death 

The Gate Keepers of Death
By David Glenn Cox


There are several reasons that I believe we won’t get adequate healthcare reform. The first reason is that we don’t really deserve it. We let the political class ride unicycles and juggle bowling pins, anything to amuse the cows. Then we let the media and special interest lobbying groups tell us what’s good for us and what’s bad for us. We rail against what we don’t like and mumble about what we do want, and since the bulk of us are healthy it is just a quiet murmur instead of the torch-bearing, angry mob that it should be.

Any impartial review of America’s for-profit healthcare system would find it to be the most unsuccessful endeavor since the tower of Babel. They try to save the dying while they ignore the sick. It is intentional and criminal, but it is easier to bill an estate because dead men argue no invoice. It has been said that the largest amount spent on health care is spent in the last six months of life. We’ll spend half a million dollars to cut, probe, prod and pry every orifice of an eighty-nine year old to try to goose them along to eighty-nine and a half.

I spent a short time working as a representative for an ambulance company. My job was to call on nursing homes and to convince them to use us as their primary carrier. The competition for business was fierce and the pay lucrative. One sunny spring morning I strolled into a nursing home. There was an elderly man sitting in the sunshine outside the front door. Trying to be friendly I asked, “How are you this morning?”

“I’m old, damn it; how the hell do you think I am?” But I didn’t let him rain on my parade any. He was at least mobile and lucid, as inside, down long corridors, were the rooms of the deteriorating elderly.

They lived two to a hospital-room sized coffin, hooked up to drips and monitors, in diapers and hospital gowns, each with a TV blaring. I was struck by the absurdity of the blaring TVs because many were not lucid, and even for the others the TV had no relevance to their lives whatsoever. Wheel of Fortune or Entertainment Tonight? As absurd as using vitamin water to waterboard prisoners in Guantanomo; perhaps it was a comfort but probably not. It was a comfort for one and all to exclaim, “See? They are not left alone; they have TV!” I began to understand the man at the door.

Calling on a nursing home wasn’t much different from calling on auto parts stores. There's some people checking the inventory, along with billing clerks and warehouse people. You bring them candy or gift baskets and put your stickers on the phones, then leave your card in the head nurse’s office. They’ve got to like you for you to have a chance with them, so you’ve got to make nice. But it was difficult for me to do because I didn’t feel comfortable in a warehouse of the dead but still breathing. I left the candy and made small talk but always felt ill at ease.

This was a mid-range warehouse. I had called on some that were nicer, and some that were worse. I've had paramedics tell me tales of the truly awful ones where they wrapped the dead in electric blankets so they could say that they had only been dead an hour when it was more like three. The nicer ones had flowers on the desk and nice wallpaper and drapes. Some had aviaries full of colorful finches. but once past the façade the game was the same. Poor wretches, frozen in contorted positions, waiting for the reaper and always with that confounded TV on.

As I came into work one morning the boss called me into the office. “Look,” he said, “I’ve got two people who have called in sick today and I’ve got a full schedule of totes. Can you do me a favor and drive the Med-van?” Trying to be cooperative but at the same time fully apprehensive, I explained, “I don’t mind driving but I feel very nervous because all your people have medical training and I have none.”

We picked up our first patient at the nursing home. She was an elderly woman who couldn’t have weighed over ninety pounds. She lay on the bed motionless and expressionless; she never made a sound as the nurses and I lifted her by her sheet onto the gurney. I had driven the ambulances before, shuttling them for repairs or to fill them up with gas, but this was my first time with human cargo. We carried her twelve miles to the doctor’s office, a palatial palace of a building with electric doors and a tall, wide atrium. We wheeled her into the foyer and the medic went to the front desk to get instructions.

We were told to leave her there and they would take her back later while we returned to the ambulance. Or next run had been canceled so we were told to just wait there. We waited for forty-five minutes as the old woman lay on display in the middle of the foyer on a gurney, in a dressing gown, covered with a sheet. Finally they took her to the back; she was in and out in twenty minutes and then we drove her back to her bed in the warehouse. We charged $95.00 each way or $190.00 for a twenty-four mile ride. The doctor charged considerably more, and Medicaid paid for it all.

My heart went out to her because of the indignity of it all, the callousness to be left on the floor like a freight delivery. If common sense ruled the day the doctor should have come to her. We didn’t deliver her for treatment, but merely for a card punch. Cha ching, easy money! The doctor wins, the ambulance company wins and the only one shorted and inconvenienced is the patient. It wasn't for treatment, only to check vital signs to measure the sand left in the hourglass. It was five o’clock when we got back so it was my last run, but I told the boss that it really upset me to drive in traffic with someone that frail.

The truth was it upset me to tote people who didn’t need to be toted. Years ago I spent three days installing an acoustical ceiling in a funeral home and it didn’t bother me nearas much because those peoples' troubles were over. Here I felt like I was part the antagonist and part of a truly awful system and I could sell it but I couldn’t perform it.

My father’s family has two known traits, alcoholism and colon cancer. The first is so strong that it's made me believe that my family were indeed the original creators of the alcoholic beverage. In my mind's eye I see them now in the back of a dark, smoky primordial cave with my ancestors laboring over a bubbling cauldron as a voice asks, “Hey, Cox. Whatcha making back there?” But the record keeping was sketchy back in those days, so I had to let the patent fight go by the boards.

The colon cancer is just as pronounced with a solid majority of all male relatives dying from it. My own father watched his father and his uncles die from it, and then one-by-one his brothers. So I asked my dad as he was getting along in years if he had been checked. He looked me straight into the eyes the way a father does for emphasis and he answered, “What good would that do? They all went to the doctor for it and they all died of it just the same. They had surgeries and chemotherapy and they all had colostomy bags attached to their sides. And for what?” Then he looked at me with dead seriousness and said these two words, “Not me.”

Near his seventy-ninth birthday I got the call that my dad was in the hospital and not expected to live. His intestines had ruptured and he was eaten up with cancer, but he had lived at home and on his own terms until the day he died. He saw no use in prolonging his life by a year or even two by sacrificing his dignity. They rushed him into emergency surgery, and the doctor opened him up, cleaned him up, patched his ruptured intestine, then taped up the wound and waited on the inevitable. My stepmother tried to explain, “The doctor was so nice, your dad would have liked him. They took him into surgery and he was out in ninety minutes.”

The surgeon's bill for the operation was over $35,000, and along with the hospital's bill the total was over a hundred thousand. All to keep a dying man alive for twelve more hours, and my dad passed away almost ten years ago. His brother had the surgeries and the chemotherapy and was then too ill to stay at home. When they told him they were going to put him into a nursing home he protested, saying. “I won’t survive there twenty-four hours! I won't live there!” He didn’t. He had hidden medication in his luggage and took it all, and then downed it with a warm beer.

Our for-profit health care system profits by prolonging life by any means necessary. Had my father not made out a living will they would have kept him alive on a machine until the money ran out. Because it was profitable; not because it was the right thing to do. Death with dignity and on our own terms is the final punctuation for a life of dignity. Prolonging misery is a tax on the living and a tax on the dying; one paid with coin, the other paid with suffering.

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*sigh* I fear you are right...If hope springs eternal, I think our hope sprang a leak. And the debate has just begun to heat up as the (Blue) dog days of summer arrive...(rated).
That confounded TV is always on in the county jail too - turned up to 10 and usually on something noisy and/or violent
I know you are right! It's horrible the way they do us. My 84-year-old husband had a cataract operation and he died the next year. I think euthenasia should be an option.
David--your bio says you write satire, and I know that's true from previous posts I've read. But this isn't satire. It's a harsh and uncomfortable truth. I thank you for writing it, as it says what I've been thinking for many years now but couldn't ever say as eloquently and with as much clarity as you have here. I wish everyone could read this. If we live long enough and aren't fortunate enough to die in a head-on or of a massive heart attack at home with no witnesses, many of us will likely end up in one of those warehouses. I shudder just thinking about it. I'm very much with your uncle with the stash of pills and a warm beer. Seems like a viable option to me, especially as I'm so quickly approaching that time when decisions will need to be made. Most of us are sad to think about having to euthanize a beloved pet. But why shouldn't I be able to think about euthanizing myself when the time is right? Rated for your ability to think about how things are and for caring. D
You've given us fine examples of the cultural peculiarities of the USA. Those quaint customs of those colorful people. In a society as afraid of death as we are, our medical system is merely a reflection of our mores and folkways. Different cultures will give you different treatments of the elderly in their last months of life. Single payer or monstrosity, these incidents you describe will not change.
What you say is true.. I know it is, I'm living it right now.
in a land where everyone has a gun, it just takes one bullet.

euthanasia would be nice, less mess with a pill and you can have a going away party like that guy in 'satyricon,' but the real problem is facing up to the day when all your useful living is done.

everyone should see 'little big man', and practice saying: "today is a good day to die."
I get what you're saying, but I think it should be up to the dying to decide whether to prolong or kick the bucket. And here's my reasoning: Whenever/where ever the government gets involved in anything there is no or very little gray area. No margin. No room for discretion or more aptly, no room for common sense. It is why I feel like every law should be followed by this phrase: "And you know what I mean." Because even though we all know what was meant by the law when it was originally created, the upholders of law rarely use the discretion and common sense it was meant to be used with. So if there was a gray area for a certain patient but the insurance company was able to get two doctors to say they had less than 20% of living even if the truth was 70%, it's cheaper to pull the plug and they are not going to crying themselves to sleep if it was a kid with Leukemia they pulled the plug on so what the hell. It's not *just* the aged that spend a lot in the last 6 months of life.

Another thing that really snapped my interest was the absurd cost the doctor and hospital charged to keep your father going for just 12 hours. This is outrageous and what I would like to know is how in the hell did the expense of doctors ever get so fucking outrageously high??? My dad also had cancer and the treatments were incredibly high. Somewhere around $200K. Then they gave him too strong of a dose and the dose of chemo is actually what killed him. And we paid for it. This seems really fucked up.
I so agree.

I like the views of the Dying With Dignity people, where this horrific spending at the end of life to leave a legacy of debt to the heirs has an alternative of compassion, integrity, and relative painlessness, and education in seeing death as a door to more life, not the end of it all.

Blessings from Zing
A resounding yes and wild applause for everything you wrote, especially this:

"Prolonging misery is a tax on the living and a tax on the dying; one paid with coin, the other paid with suffering."

Heading to Digg and Reddit with this (hopefully, someone already got on the ball).
This post strikes a nerve. None of us want to end up in medical limbo-land yet so many do. I pray I go quickly when it is my time and don't get caught up in the Medicare machine. Medicare does what it has to do, yet, many are kept alive due to what family members want, yet the family members don't want them kept alive in THEIR house. So the cycle continues.
It's truly crazy that we spend so much to prolong life when there is really no life left. And it is shocking that the surgeon could get away with charging $35,000 for operating on your father. What possible justification could be made for that?

Whenever I hear or read one of these stories, I think how much good could be done with that much money...where it could save a promising life, for example.
I haven't yet read the comments but will be back for them. I needed to say something first.

With my grandmother, it was similar to what you described with your uncles. She was a corpse hooked up to a machine for years before we finally got permission for her to die. She had asked to never be left like that but there was no living will. My mother felt that keeping her alive indefinitely was the right thing to do and Medicaid was more than happy to oblige - as if there was any life left in the 95 year old comotose woman hooked up to feeding and frequently breathing and kidney machines. We wasn't allowed to die until she was 98. During those 3 years she was frequently taken via ambulance to doctors who no more cared about her than a sack of molding potatoes but were more than happy to keep getting money for keeping her alive.

I on the other hand am 38 with no insurance and a chronic illness. I had an ER doctor try to have me admitted to the hospital when I was desperately sick only to have the admitting doctor refuse when he asked me about insurance and how I'd pay for the stay. Funny thing is it doesn't take much for me to be working 60 or more hours a week. A little medical attention when I need it goes a long way. I'm just not allowed to get it when I need it. Which means I can't hold down a job and can't work which means I go longer without medical care.

It's all about the bottom line. Doctor's love people like my grandmother because she could never complain and they could keep raking in the money. They see no need to try and help me because it costs them up front, even though when I work I make a very handsome wage and am an extremely productive member of society, which in the long run is good for everyone. Of course, we're a Wal-Mart nation. We want what's cheap now even if it's not any good and costs us infinitely more later. Wish I could marry a Brit or Canadian and live someplace that gets this. I've dated enough of them so that their kinks no longer surprise me..... but I digress. As always, thank you for your excellent post. Rated.
Corrections: I was overly tired and made a couple of mistakes in the first paragraph. I misspelled comatose and meant to say "she wasn't allowed to die" instead of "we". I apologize for the errors which I should have noticed prior to posting.
David- I featured this post in Palliative Care Grand Rounds, because I liked it so much. We're a small group, without huge readership, but hopefully someone will stop by ... risa

http://risaden.blogspot.com/2009/08/palliative-care-grand-rounds-august.html