When you have to say, “There is nothing more we can do”, there’s a better way to do it.

July 13, 2009 by  
Filed under For Healthcare Professionals


Unfortunately, there comes a time in a patient’s life where you have to say to the patient or their family, “I’m sorry, there’s nothing more we can do.” This is the wrong thing to say and let me explain why. I know what you’re trying to say is, “there is nothing more we can do to cure your disease” but what the patient or loved one hears is, “I’m giving up and walking out this door and never coming back.” I know that’s irrational and that’s not what you meant to say but unfortunately these words sound like abandonment to the patient or family.

I believe it’s important to tell the truth about prognosis (if the patient wants to hear it), even if you can’t give them an exact time give them an estimate. You can say days to weeks, weeks to months, months to years. People deserve the opportunity and time to clean up their lives. So, when you have to say that there really is nothing more you can do, you may be missing a really important piece to this conversation. Here is how to solve this. Go ahead and tell them that there’s nothing more you can do to cure the disease, and then continue on and say, “But there’s lots more I can do. I can do plenty to keep your loved one comfortable, out of pain, minimize their suffering, refer them to hospice, get your religious leader in here to pray and help provide a peaceful and dignified death.” Helping someone to have a pain-free and dignified death is substantial. I don’t know if you realize this but palliative care specialists have the highest satisfaction rate of all medical specialties. And why is this? It’s because this is profound and meaningful work. You really matter to the patient and the family on those last days of life. It is wonderful if you can say to the patient that you’re going to walk on this journey with them no matter where it takes you. Then they won’t feel abandoned and alone. You will still be the healer, but now the focus of your healing is to heal suffering, not the disease.

The other reason this technique works is because whenever you have to say no to a patient, it is always important to offer them something else in exchange. I don’t know if you’ve had this experience with young children when trying to take a breakable item out of their hands. A smart parent grabs their favorite toy and exchanges it with them or distracts them toward something else. The same thing can happen in medicine. If you have to say no to a patient then offer something that you can say yes to. Even if all it is good pain management or the hope for a peaceful death.

Have a kind and respectful day.

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Comments

One Comment on "When you have to say, “There is nothing more we can do”, there’s a better way to do it."

  1. Ann Blanchard on Tue, 1st Sep 2009 3:54 am 

    This is a wonderful post and I wish the doctors my dad has been seeing for his terminal lung cancer had shown a fraction of the consideration you write about.

    My dad was hospitalized last December and then placed in the skilled nursing section of the assisted living facility where he and my mom live. He was given daily radiation for two weeks. So we saw his regular physician (who is an internist and a gerontologist) and a radiation oncologist. Neither has checked up on him once after he left their care (in January) when he returned to his normal independent living apartment. He’s still doing remarkably well, but with our fractured healthcare system, he could disappear/die and no one would even notice. It’s just kind of sad that any kind of personal connection between my dad and his docs just isn’t there and never was. They’re fine docs…I’m not complaining about his “medical” treatment. But any kind of “human” connection isn’t there. My dad is just a visit and an insurance payment. I find that sad.

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