Jeni lake was a young girl who had 3 tumors on her brain and 3 others on her spine. After she started her chemotherapy, she was not supposed to get pregnant. However, during her treatment, she discovered that she was pregnant and now she had to decide. Keep the baby and stopped the treatment or abort and continue the care. She decided to keep the baby, despite the fact she knew the tumor could get bigger and she can die. She delivered her baby and died few days later.…
Coming from Margaret Edson's 1999 Pulitzer Prize winning play, Wit recounts the awful story of Professor Vivian Bearing. Vivian, a savage researcher of seventeenth Century English poetry, is diagnosed of having stage 4 metastatic ovarian growth. Dr Harvey Kelekian, Vivian's expert doctor and driving figure around there of medicinal exploration, clarifies that the best treatment alternative she has is a forceful trial chemotherapy at the full measurement.…
2. When we think about doctors and nurses in the health care profession our hope for us or a loved one is to receive the best care as possible. In health care we encounter many providers who have different views and attitudes toward patients. Professor Vivian Bearing is a well-respected 17th Century English poetry scholar. She is told that she has stage four metastatic ovarian cancer, by a fellow college Dr. Harvey Kelekian; who has asked Vivian for research purposes if she would be willing to undergo an aggressive 8 month chemo treatment. In the play/movie Wit, we quickly see the differences between the two health care professionals; one is a former student of Professor Bearings, Dr. Jason Posner who is Dr. Kelekian’s lead research fellow,…
Vivian was in all ways a scholar and respected intelligence and perception above all things. She was a woman of many talents, but all of them were not enough when forced to deal with her own mortality. On being informed she had cancer and that she "must be very tough" because the treatment was agonizing she quips, "It appears to be a matter, as the saying goes, of life and death. I know all about life and death. I am, after all, a scholar of Donne's Holy Sonnets, which explore mortality " Truthfully, she didn't know anything about life or death and merely hid behind her intellect as did Donne.…
Vivian Bearing is a sophisticated scholar. She is a university professor in seventeenth-century poetry, who is diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Her oncologist, Dr. Kelekian suggests an experimental chemotherapy to be used on her, which would consist of eight full doses. Vivian agrees to the treatment, so the story begins. When watching the movie Wit, I related this movie much to what I had previously learned in high school. In high school, I learned about the Kubler-Ross model. The Kubler-Ross model, also known as the five stages of grief describe the process of death one goes through in order to come to acceptance with their crisis or tragedy; in most cases being an illness. I will be providing examples from the movie for each stage of grief Vivian Bearing had to go through. The five stages are: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.…
First, is Dr. Harvey Kelekian, his purpose is shown in the very first scene, while giving Vivian her diagnosis. In the scene, it is made apparent that both Vivian and Dr. Kelekian are of a scholarly mindset. Vivian has extensively studied the very complex and difficult to understand Holy Sonnets of John Donne, and Kelekian is a cancer researcher. Though they study in different fields, their approach is pretty much the same; they are both very thorough in the research. They have immense passion for learning and obtaining knowledge. They are both teachers in very difficult to understand fields, and they both sometimes forget that not everyone can understand their advanced terminology. For example, when Kelekian is diagnosing Vivian, he uses a slew of medical terminology that no regular person would understand and thinks nothing of it. Kelekian is a sort of kindred spirit for Vivian, a fellow scholar.…
In the first stage of the play where Vivian is initially diagnosed she shows signs of defiance, which gives the play a real life scenario feeling because it is natural to be in denial for a person under her circumstances. She feels as if she can beat this disease and get back to teaching as soon as possible. There are many of times that she tells the doctors (and audience) to keep giving the highest dosing of chemotherapy. Dr. Bearing understands what she is going to go through and is in terms with that on an intellectual level. She even reads books on medical terminology so as to not feel inferior to the doctors when they are reading her charts to her. This also shows the sense of denial and ignorance Dr. Bearing has to the big picture. And this big picture is that in the end she will die.…
• Implement patient’s treatment plan to THR and TKR under the supervision of a physical therapy.…
In this movie Vivian Bearings is diagnosed with ovarian cancer. She is given “experimental” treatment. Some of the other characters include: Dr. Kelekian, the head doctor who informed her of her diagnosis; Jason Posner, the detached kid doctor and Susie, the sympathetic nurse. Throughout the movie Vivian goes through the different stages of death and dying, for example denial, anger, depression and acceptance.…
Suneel D. Kamath. A patient whom he refers to as “Ruth” was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 30. According to Doctor Kamath, initially Ruth had a “75 percent chance of staying free of breast cancer for the rest of her life.” Although the treatment would be very invasive, would have many side effects, and would be very harsh on her body, it would be the most effective in getting rid of the cancer if she began treatment at that moment. Unfortunately, Ruth decided to find a different method of treatment with a doctor in Mexico. The treatment consisted of less aggressive, natural intravenous medication. She was medicated with vitamins and certain plant extracts that claimed to have properties that would eliminate the cancer. She continued this process for a few months until she believed the treatment had been a success and then returned to the United States to resume her life. Approximately a year later, she was once again hospitalized for some health complications and after an MRI was done, it was found that the cancer had spread all throughout her spinal cord and into her brain. Shortly after this is when Doctor Kamath was first introduced to Ruth. By this time the effects of the brain cancer were beginning to show, she had trouble recollecting memories, communicating, and even ingesting food. While Ruth finally decided to pursue treatment with chemotherapy, her chances of survival had diminished. As a result, a few days later Ruth died at the age of…
As nervous as I was when I walked into Saint Joseph Catholic School (K-8) for my first day of kindergarten, I never thought I would be able to leave after 6th grade and enter the world of middle school. In a small school of about 400 kids, I was familiar with every face that passed by me in the hallway. I got to know the kids in my grade so well and we all knew each other’s life stories. By the time I was in 6th grade at Saint Joseph, some of my friends were planning on going to Kinard middle school in 7th grade. At this point in my life, I was not completely content with where I was going to school. The realization came to me that it was time to move on. It was time for me to try something new.…
Born 4 weeks premature, Silvia was what his parents called their miracle child. So when she gave birth to her 2nd child at the age of 32, her parents were simply ecstatic. Two years ago she was diagnosed with breast cancer. This she is told has now metastasized and involves her bones, which has been causing her severe pain. It’s difficult to take care of her two children and work while fighting for her life. Her oncologists have been trying to identify the chemotherapy drugs that can work for her in the hope of controlling the cancer. But even with all these her suffering is just getting worse. For her children’s Silvia uses all her strength to fight but she has been getting weaker and can barely get out of bed without help. Because of the pain she now spends most of her time curled up in bed, unable to eat or take care of her two young children. Her physician sends her to a specialty clinic in order to try and control her pain and keep her comfortable. This would at least help her resume some of her day-to-day activities. Palliative care clinics provide comfort to patients in order to restore some sort of norm in a patient’s life. This helps the patient be able to cope and take care of his/family.…
The only chance the teacher has is if the doctors decide to try an experimental drug on her, she is the main support for her family, and the teacher salary is not likely to be sufficient to support a family and pay hospital bills, nevertheless look for an alternative cure for cancer, which leaves the teacher almost…
Diane was a patient of Dr. Timothy Quill, who was diagnosed with acute myelomonocytic leukemia. Diane overcame alcoholism and had vaginal cancer in her youth. She had been under his care for a period of 8 years, during which an intimate doctor-patient bond had been established. It was Dr. Quill's observation that "she was an incredibly clear, at times brutally honest, thinker and communicator." This observation became especially cogent after Diane heard of her diagnosis. Dr. Quill informed her of the diagnosis, and of the possible treatments. This series of treatments entailed multiple chemotherapy sessions, followed by a bone marrow transplant, accompanied by an array of ancillary treatments.…
Patiently awaiting the doctor’s return, Allison aimlessly flips through magazines while pondering what her results will read. She repeatedly tells herself “This time, I will be free. I will remain strong. I won’t give up.” This is her 17th visit to the oncologist in 6 months, and it’s her 17th time sitting in the waiting room to see if her body has finally rid of the cancer once and for all. Over the past 3 years, Allison has never lost hope, she constantly strives for recovery and right now she is ready to face her results that will have an immense effect on her life. Allison is courageous.…