Susan – Interview 17
Susan’s mother was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in May 2009. The doctor told her mother that her condition was terminal and that there was no effective treatment available. Susan’s mother developed pneumonia and passed away peacefully in August 2009.
In late March 2009 Susan’s mother said that she had pain in her abdomen. Then she felt pain in her back too. She also had diarrhoea and constipation, which her GP said was due to irritable bowel syndrome. Susan’s mother also had diabetes.
Gradually the pain got worse. Susan’s mother thought it was due to indigestion. She could still eat but did not feel well. In May she felt worse, so she went to her GP again. She saw three different GPs within a week. An X-ray showed that there was something unusual in the region of her back. Susan’s mother went back to her GP, who noticed that she had jaundice. She was then admitted to hospital for eight days, where she had an endoscopy.
Susan’s mother went home. Ten days later she went to see the consultant at the hospital. She was told the shocking news that she had terminal pancreatic cancer. The doctor also told her that there was no effective treatment for her condition.
Susan’s mother stayed at home. The district nurse helped her with symptoms such as constipation, and the Macmillan nurse helped with pain relief. Susan’s mother took morphine and paracetamol. This relieved the pain, but gradually she needed a higher dose. In August, just before Susan’s mother died, she needed an even higher dose of morphine, but on this higher dose she started to hallucinate. The dose was reduced a bit, so that she was having just enough medicine to keep her comfortable but not so much that she had hallucinations. Susan’s mother also lost a lot of weight.
On Friday 14th August Susan’s mother was only semi-conscious. Susan’s brother called an ambulance and her mother was admitted to hospital. She became weaker and her blood pressure dropped and her breathing became shallower. The doctors said that Susan’s mother had pneumonia. She was given intravenous antibiotics but she passed away peacefully on 15th August. Susan was glad to have support from a hospital chaplain. Susan helped to arrange her mother’s funeral.
Looking back, Susan is not sure that her mother was fully aware of her treatment options. Susan does not think that her mother knew enough about the treatments that might have been available at specialist hospitals. Susan feels that the doctors should have encouraged her mother to try some form of treatment. On the other hand Susan acknowledges that her mother had been given notes about treatments that were available at a specialist hospital (notes found on the internet by a friend), and that she had decided that she did not want to prolong her life unless she was going to have a good quality of life.
Susan was interviewed for Healthtalkin 2010