Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Guiding patients through their medical challenges
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
Search
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
Redland Bayside News > Seniors > Guiding patients through their medical challenges
Seniors

Guiding patients through their medical challenges

Redland Bayside News
Redland Bayside News
Share
3 Min Read
While death can be met with quiet acceptance, the loss of independence is rarely endured without distress.
While death can be met with quiet acceptance, the loss of independence is rarely endured without distress.
SHARE

MODERN medicine owes much to philosopher Rene Descartes, who centuries ago separated the mind from the body.

This allowed science to study the body as a machine that could be fixed when broken. The model has brought extraordinary progress, but it has also created a blind spot. Bodies do not suffer – people do.

In hospitals, I see this blind spot daily. Too often, medicine focuses on curing disease at any cost, while overlooking what matters most to patients: their independence, their relationships, their ability to live as themselves. I used to think older people were simply like me, only older.

But the longer I work with them, the clearer it becomes that independence is treasured even more than life itself.

While death can be met with quiet acceptance, the loss of independence is rarely endured without distress.

Frailty, now recognised as its own medical condition, lies at the heart of this challenge. Frail patients are more likely to suffer chronic illness, more likely to depend on others, and less likely to survive serious disease.

For them, aggressive treatments often bring heavy burdens – sometimes greater than the illness itself. The risks of death or permanent disability loom large.

Medicine rightly demands informed consent, yet our ability to predict outcomes is limited. Even estimating whether a patient will live, or how treatment will affect their independence, is an inexact science.

Within the body-as-machine model, these uncertainties become even harder to confront. The hospital’s pace, younger doctors’ lack of life experience, and a culture that resists talking about death all add to the problem.

But the truth is simple. Older people do not want miracle-workers. They want to be seen, acknowledged, and spoken to honestly. They want doctors to recognise their humanity, not just their failing bodies.

For me, the deepest satisfaction in medicine comes not from fixing machines, but from guiding people through choices that reflect their values and lives.

Extracts from an article by Bill Lukin, published in Theconversation.com.au –2017

Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Latest Redlands News

Redland Council to weigh in on proposed law forcing councillors out if they run for state parliament
Community Featured News Redland City Council
Redland Council set to endorse after-action review of Tropical Cyclone Alfred response
Community Featured News Redland City Council
Council flags $8.1M deficit in first 2025–26 budget review
Community Featured News Redland City Council
Redland community invited to contribute to Empowering Councils Bill Inquiry
Community Featured News Redland City Council State Politics
Council hits the high notes with quirky, song-filled mowing announcement
Community Featured News Redland City Council
‘OBSCURE RULE’ FINE SPARKS FAMILY FURY — BUT COUNCIL SAYS THEY DID REPLY
Community Featured News Redland City Council
The initiative is drawing input from across the health ecosystem.
Redlands launches major community health push
Business

You Might Also Like

LOOKING AHEAD: Social demographer Bernard Salt AM has given a special address on the future of ageing. Photo: Dave Hunt/AAP Image
Seniors

Reaching the age of contentment

October 26, 2023
On average, older jobseekers take three times as long to find work compared to younger applicants.
Seniors

Too old to hire – hidden cost of discrimination

August 21, 2025
SURVEY: Seniors are helping shape Queensland’s age-friendly future.
Seniors

Seniors have say on age-friendly future for the Sunshine State

October 5, 2023
It’s happening now: AI here to stay
Seniors

It’s happening now: AI here to stay

December 14, 2023
Copyright © 2025 Local News Group - Website by LNG Digital
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?