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DIY ventilator? 'Weeds' tries to pull it off

MEDICINE
THE UNREAL WORLD

June 30, 2008|Marc Siegel, Special to The Times
  • Weeds
    Showtime

"Weeds": "Mother Thinks the Birds Are After Her" episode; Showtime, June 16.

The premise: Having burned down her house, Nancy Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker) and her family travel to the Mexican border town of Ren Mar, Calif., where they visit Bubbie, the 95-year-old grandmother of Nancy's dead husband. Bubbie doesn't answer the door, and the family eventually finds her hooked up to a ventilator and feeding tube. Len (Albert Brooks), Nancy's former father-in-law, returns after several hours. It is clear that he is the only one taking care of Bubbie. He changes her diaper, turns her and says he will clean her feeding tube soon. He doesn't adjust or monitor the ventilator despite the fact that the tubes can easily clog and the air pressures are subject to constant change.

The medical questions: How much oversight does a home respirator require in an unresponsive or minimally responsive patient? Is there a need for frequent suctioning every few hours? Does turning the patient only once in several hours increase the risk of decubiti (skin wounds)? Would an aide or a relative be involved in the actual maintaining and monitoring of the feeding tube? Does a comatose patient on a ventilator feel anything? How long can a non-responsive or minimally responsive patient on a ventilator survive in this condition?


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The reality: A ventilator is an aggressive, expensive treatment more consistent with hospital intervention than with home use, and a patient facing impending death is unlikely to use one.

"With a home ventilator, there is the need for around-the-clock monitoring by trained personnel as well as a backup power source," says Dr. David Wallenstein, internist at the UCLA Palliative Care Service. For proper use of a home ventilator, a nurse, nurse's aide or trained family member must be equipped to deal with emergencies, including mucous plugging or increased airway pressures. The buildup of lung secretions, which occurs as a matter of course, does require frequent suctioning. But less monitoring of the ventilator, even if not medically ideal, can be acceptable in a dying patient if the patient doesn't seem to be uncomfortable and the family insists on not pulling the plug, says Dr. Joseph Lowy, director of the Palliative Care Service at NYU Langone Medical Center.

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