Interview with Dr. Richard Fife
Richard Fife, PhD, had been involved with VITAS Healthcare Corporation
for the past 20 years. He organized and trained many ethics committees
throughout the VITAS system and also serves as the chair of the VITAS
Corporate Ethics Committee. In addition to serving as an ethics consultant
for the 30 hospices operated by VITAS, he is in charge of the chaplaincy
program, which employs over 150 chaplains, as well as the volunteer and
bereavement programs for VITAS. Dr. Fife is a frequent lecturer on issues
relating to ethics, bereavement, pastoral care and diversity. Dr. Fife
organized and started the poverty and urban ministry community programs in
Tampa and Daytona Beach, FL, which has been operating for over 20 years and
for which he is an ordained minister.
Q: As the chair of the VITAS Corporate Ethics Committee, you
have had in-depth involvement in ethics and end-of-life care. Can you give
us some background into the history of hospice ethics committees?
A: Until recently ethics committees in hospices were
relatively new. I began forming some of the first hospice ethics committees
for VITAS around 1992. Before that time, most ethics committees that worked
with hospice programs were hospital-based. Many hospices have since
recognized the importance of having a separate committee that reflects and
understands the hospice philosophy of care. Today a significant number of
hospices have formed their own committees.
Q: What advice do you have for a hospice interested in starting
an ethics committee?
A: I see the primary responsibility of an ethics committee to be
education, for the committee, for the staff and for the community. At VITAS,
we worked with a professional consulting group when we began forming our
committees. Because of the size of our organization, we were able to focus
extensive staff time and training on the process. For the past several years
I have been training the VITAS ethics committees. Hospices now have the
advantage of utilizing the Internet to find a wealth of resources for
forming and training ethics committees. In addition, NHPCO has excellent
guidelines on “Developing a Hospice Ethics Committee” that have been used by
many hospices.
Q: How does an organization ensure that the committee receives
continuing education and training to keep up with the changes in the medical
and ethical fields?
A: An essential element for any hospice ethics committee is
to have a “point person” within the organization to keep the committee
members up-to-date on issues in the hospice field, in bioethics, and in the
news that might have an impact on their decision-making process. For
instance, just today [ed. February 22, 2005] the U.S. Supreme Court
agreed to review the challenge to Oregon’s law on physician-assisted
suicide. Within a few minutes of that announcement, information was e-mailed
out from my office to all of the staff at VITAS, including to the members of
the ethics committees. VITAS also has a corporate ethics committee that
meets every few months, and we prepare extensive packets of information and
materials for the members.
Q: As you stated above, the size of your organization allows you
some advantages in forming and communicating with these committees. What
advice would you have for smaller hospice organizations facing these issues?
A: Well, this certainly is more challenging in smaller
hospices. A great place to begin is by talking about your organizational
values, and how they are tied in to your mission. When you start by
examining yourself, you always become a stronger organization. Ideally,
these values then connect to practice, which helps give the framework for
dealing with the ethical questions that arise.
Many communities have universities or other institutions that offer
conferences or workshops in health care ethics and decision making. And
again, the Internet can be a great resource for smaller hospices or hospices
in more isolated areas, by offering both online courses as well as
communication with other hospice professionals.
What you miss, of course, by using the Internet is the conversation and
the sharing of ideas face-to-face, which I believe to be the most exciting
and rewarding part of the ethics committee process. Each person may come to
the table with a specific perspective, but every discussion opens up new
options and ideas.
Q: What are some of the common issues that come before the
ethics committees in VITAS?
A: What usually comes before the ethics committee is an
ethical dilemma, which I would define as a conflict of values or ethical
principles. Essentially, ethical dilemmas are a matter of legitimate
differences of opinion among various people on a moral choice. Basically,
most ethics committees would give credence to four or five bioethical
principles:
- autonomy (the patient’s right to choose)
- beneficence (what is of the most benefit to the patient)
- nonmaleficence (do no harm)
- justice (treat like cases equal) and
- veracity (tell the truth).
If you hold these principles to be of great value, than the ethical
dilemma arises when two or more of these principles are in conflict; and,
you can understand the value on either side. For example, one may greatly
value the principle of autonomy; but, what if the patient chooses to not
take medication that the nurse knows will relieve the pain. The nurse values
choice (autonomy) but is concerned about what is best for the patient
(beneficence). What the ethics committee often finds is that the decision in
this case is not as evident as it appears. Or, the patient may want to know
his or her true prognosis, but the family warns that telling the patient the
truth will hasten the person’s death. Now you have conflicts with autonomy,
nonmaleficence and veracity, for starters.
However, an important role that these committees play, especially for
staff, is that they allow staff a place to bring issues that may not be
willingly addressed by other members of the organization. Many are not pure
ethical dilemmas. A number of them are ultimately about communication. For
instance, we had a situation where I learned that a couple of nurses were
conflicted with what they perceived to be the orders of a physician for a
patient in the inpatient unit. I encouraged them to bring their concerns
before the ethics committee. Once the discussions were begun with the
committee and physician, we were able to determine the real conflict and
resolve a breakdown in communications; which, in turn, headed off the
possible loss of staff in this situation.
Q: Who should serve on a hospice ethics committee?
A: The committee should represent the disciplines that make
up the hospice interdisciplinary team--a chaplain, a doctor, a social
worker, a nurse or nurses aide. I also like to invite two or three members
from the community outside of hospice--that helps to keep us honest and
keeps us looking at the bigger picture. We have found in recent years that a
nursing home representative has added an important perspective to many of
our committees.
We don’t impose “term limits” or other limitations on how long the
members can stay on the committee. The healthcare field still has enough
turnover that some change is inevitable. And I have found that as ethics
committees work together, they become a stronger moral community, so that
longevity can be a real asset.
Q: You are based in Florida, so I’m sure that you have followed
the events in the Schiavo case very carefully. Do these types of national
stories about end-of-life care have an impact on hospice ethics committees
around the country?
A: Very much so; there has been lots of discussion in all of
our hospices nationally about advance directives and end-of-life decision
making in light of the Schiavo case. It has been very strange to me that
this has all happened in Florida, as our state has always been a key player
in the issue of patient’s rights. In addition, Florida law is actually very
clear that in cases such as these, the spouse has the right to make health
care decisions. This has been affirmed again and again by the courts in this
case and others.
While I think the involvement of the legislature and the amount of state
resources spent on this case has been excessive, the positive aspect has
been that many more families are having important conversations about
end-of-life choices and wishes. One of our medical directors in Philadelphia
flew to Florida specifically to insure that her grandmother’s advance
directives were clear and specific.
There was much hope that the passage of the Patient Self-Determination
Act in the early 90s would lead to more people filling out clear advance
directives, but we have not seen the spike that we had hoped for. The act
only encourages that the information is given out; it has not led to real
discussions between doctors and patients. A more interesting impact has been
seen in Oregon after the votes approving physician-assisted suicide. Rather
than it being the “slippery slope” that many feared, statistics show that a
small percentage of Oregonians have actually utilized the process, and that
hospice use in Oregon has dramatically increased.
Q: What are some of the issues that hospices will be facing in
the future?
A: Developing cultural and religious sensitivity is an
ongoing issue within hospice care. The face of nursing home and hospice
patients will change dramatically over the next few years, and hospice staff
need training and resources to heighten their understanding of other
cultures and religions. In VITAS we have regular inservices on these issues,
and we have also established successful outreach programs in our
communities. In Chicago, we hired a member of the community to work with
local churches in African-American neighborhoods, and partnered with the
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition. We started a similar program in South Florida with
the Orthodox Jewish community.
Q: You have served as a hospice chaplain and ethicist for many
years. What guidance do you give to families who are facing, or may someday
face, these difficult end-of-life choices and decisions?
A: Conversations of this nature, whether large or small, are
turning points on the journey. They can bring healing and a sense of
control, even if they are painful or awkward. VITAS sees over 60,000
patients each year. We have learned that over 50% of these people have not
been told that their illness is terminal when they enter hospice care with
us. In hospice, professionals understand the deep need for patients and
families to have these conversations, and can be so helpful in facilitating
and encouraging them. The focus and the concerns are so different than in a
hospital or other health care setting, so the conversations are different,
too.
Many hospice professionals see hospice work as a mission or a crusade. So
many people outside hospice say to me, “Your work must be so sad or
depressing.” But I have seen through the years how hospice can really help
get to the heart of these difficult dilemmas that we will all inevitably
face, and allow us to focus on what is really important. You don’t abandon
hope when you enter hospice; hope just takes on a different form.
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