30/03/2026
I visited an elderly lady with terminal cancer, a diagnosis that cast a heavy shadow over her household. They knew her long term prognosis, and they had been preparing themselves for the inevitable.
However, on this day, the crisis was acute. She had developed pneumonia. Her daughter met me at the door with eyes full of conflict. She asked me if this pneumonia was the end. She wondered if they should just focus on comfort, or if there was still a reason to fight the infection.
This is a common hurdle in complex care. Families are often presented with a binary choice. You are either "giving up" or you are "going all out." This is a logical fallacy. Medicine is not a simple on-off switch. It is a spectrum calibrated by the patient’s functional reserves and the needs of the family as a whole.
In this case, my assessment showed that despite her cancer, her baseline functional reserve was still good. This was a reversible problem that could be fixed and give her many more meaningful moments and time with her loved ones.
True stewardship means using the right drug, at the right dose, for the right duration. To do this responsibly, we must replace guesswork with evidence. PCR test was performed which allowed us to move away from broad guesses and toward a more specific treatment
The Outpatient-based Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy (OPAT) was highly effective. Three days later, her fever was gone and the rattle in her chest was silent. Because her functional reserve allowed for an active recovery, the entire family gained more precious, quality time together.
This experience reinforces my core philosophy. We must treat the patient and the family as a whole unit. Our goal is not just to add days to a life, but to add life to the days.
WhatsApp me at 0168804697 to schedule an appointment for a home visit.