Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Delving into mystery of death - Hindustan Times (Lucknow Edition, INDIA) June 28, 2010


Hindustan Times
Lucknow Edition
June 28, 2010

Delving into mystery of death
UNIQUE MISSION Foreign researchers are in Varanasi to study Jain literature and
explore the philosophical dimensions of death

Anuraag Singh

VARANASI: For ages, Varanasi has been described as the City of Moksha, which Hindus visit in the quest for salvation through death.
Two young researchers from the West, however, are currently in Varanasi to explore the nuances of death.
Sean Hillman, a student of Religion Studies and Bioethics from the University of Toronto (Canada) and Ana Belelacqua Bjazelj, a PhD scholar in Asian Philosophies at the University of Ljubljana (Slovenia), are going through Jain scriptures in Varanasi to explore the philosophical dimensions of death.
For 13 long years, Sean was a Buddhist monk and lived in India. He is now probing voluntary death in Jainsim. The aim is to develop a secular palliative care model (particularly for hospitals) for peaceful and controlled death of terminally ill patients suffering from excrutiating pain.
Over the next ten days, Sean will explore in detail the eternal Jain Philosophy of Sallekhana and Samadhimarana - voluntary death through fasting and reduction of activity.
In fact, he is delving into monastic texts dealing with conscious death and dying, the practice and principles of bioethics at hospices. Sean aims to know how a decision can be made to end a terminally ill person's life by those close to him or her if he or she is unconscious.
"The ultimate aim of this research is to develop a secular palliative care model for having painless/peaceful and controlled death, particularly for those suffering from terminal ailments," Sean told HT on Sunday.
Ana, on the contrary, is looking more into philosophical dimensions of death (as dealth with in early Jainism and Buddhism).
Ana, who already has a Bachelor's degree in Chinese philosophy, says her research focuses on exploring [the] concept of change and identity (identity sustained even after death via rebirth).
Both Sean and Ana are part of a[n] 11-strong team of university students, teachers and professors from different parts of the world, on a ten-day summer trip to Parshvanath Vidyapeeth (PV) in Varanasi.
Parshvanath Vidyapeeth is a centre of excellence for Jain Studies and Research.
The trip has been organised under the auspices of the International Summer School for Jain Studies (ISSJS) and PV Global Centre for Ahinsa and Indic Research established at PV-Varanasi in 2008.
While Sean and Ana are researching the ultimate truth, other members of the group staying at PV-Varanasi are researching on other religious and philosophical projects.
Among them is Brianne Graham Donaldson [who is] doing [a] PhD in Process Philosophy at Claremont School of Theology and Centre for Neuroeconomics Studies at Claremont Graduate University, Los Angeles.
Brianne, during the course of research will blen science, experience, philosophy and ethics to study the human-animal divide, particularly how philosophy and religion have perpetuated it.
Another interesting [area of] research underway is by 59-year-old chaplain and PhD student from the Charles University in Prague, [Joseph Bartosek], who is aiming to promote inter-faith/inter cultural dialogue in the era of terrorism and ethnic conflicts. He is studying stories and parables in Jainism and compar[ing] it with those in European traditions (Christian and Pre-Christian traditions).
The group also includes P[rof.] Christian Haskett, a professor teaching Asian Religions at a US university.
Hasket[t] says his trip to the centre of the Jain studies in Varanasi is three-pronged: starting with collecting vital content for teaching students in one full semester on Jain studies in the spring of 2011, writing an article on how to teach Jainism and ending [with] collecting material on Sanskrit and Prakrit literature.

HANDS-ON EXPERIENCE

VARANASI: It'll not only be research and lectures which will mark the 10-day stay of 11 students and researchers from America and Europe in Varanasi.
The group will stay with Jain families to know the way they live, said Dr SP Pandey, assistant director of Parshvanath Vidyapeeth, the institution hosting the travellers from the west in Varanasi.
Varanasi houses over 500 Shwetambar and Digambar Jain families, Sharda Singh, research officer at PV-Varanasi, said, "They'll also visit and offer prayers at Jain temples in Varanasi, including Parshvanath Temple in Bhelupur and Suparshvanath Temple. Braving the scorching heat, the group visited the temple at Bhelupur on Sunday morning." PV-Varanasi director Dr SL Jain told journalists on Sunday that lectures would cover Jain icinography, art, meeting points
of Jainism and Buddhism, [the] concept of soul in Jainism and Buddhism and [a] project synopsis discussion, besides visits to Ganga Ghats and pujan.
The 11-member group, which arrived in Varanasi on June 23 and will stay here till July 3, is the third group of researchers-students from 15 foreign universities who ha[ve] travelled to PV-Varanasi this month. HTC

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Sallekhana-Samadhimarana and Palliative Care



Sallekhana-Samadhimarana and Palliative Care: Jain Voluntary and Controlled Death in Equanimity through Fasting and Reduction of Activity as a Model for the Dying, those Caring for the Dying and the Bereaved


COMING SOON! Completion in early July 2010.

Sean Hillman
Graduate student in 6-Week Group,
International Summer School for Jain Studies.
Delhi, Jaipur, Varanasi; INDIA
Summer 2010

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Death in Tantric Buddhism and Modern Medicine Informing the Harvesting of Organs from the Buddhist


Death in Tantric Buddhism
and Modern Medicine Informing
the Harvesting of Organs from the
Buddhist

by Sean Hillman
East Asian Studies Department
University of Toronto
June 2008

Introduction

The medical principle of “do no harm” exactly matches the Buddha’s admonishment to his followers. It is of no surprise, then, that in many difficult areas of decision-making, including those around end-of-life care, "the principles governing Buddhism and the practice of medicine have much in common." 1
Both scientific researchers and Buddhist scholars have long grappled with defining death. In both the scientific and the Buddhist view, for a human to be considered alive there must be a proper basis of support for conscious or sentient life. What differs in the traditions is in the subtleties of defining what qualifies as a proper basis of support for life, and what (if anything) is supported by this basis. In modern medicine one can no longer safely say that with the presence of the cardio-pulmonary vital signs of life, pulse and respiration, the person still exists and is alive because these systems can be kept functioning artificially with no brain activity. A major shift occurred in the history of medicine when brain-centered criteria for determining death overtook the long-standing usage of cardiac-centered criteria. Cardio-pulmonary failure and a loss of heat is not required for death to be pronounced. In its secular approach, what ceases at death pronouncement, beyond the failure of biological systems and integration, is not clearly defined in medicine. In medical and ethical literature there is sometimes mention of the ‘person’ or the ‘individual,’ and sometimes ‘conscious experience.’ There is no mention of mind, as an ethereal, non-biological aspect to the living being. From the Buddhist perspective, the main characteristic for determining death is the point when the mind, or consciousness, leaves the body. Tantric and other sources, both textual and commentarial, point to this being preceded by cardiac death, and followed by the loss of bodily warmth. They seem to indicate that the mind cannot leave from a body sustained mechanically, even if there is total brain-death.
What is not at issue here is organ harvesting from living donors because there is no question as to their status. They are, by definition, alive. The main purpose of this paper is to show that by exploring the medical and Buddhist views of death, looking at the changing medical practices in harvesting organs and tissue from brain-dead donors and non-heart-beating donors (NHBD) and the Buddhist commentarial reflections on such, it is possible to tease out generalised Buddhist criteria for organ harvesting directives. There are many issues that we are confronted with in contemporary society where is not possible to say definitively what the Buddhist position is on the subject. For one, modern technologies have led to unique situations that did not exist at the time of the Buddha.

"The ancient monastic texts reveal that the Buddha resolved problematic matters on a case-by-case basis as new situations arose...the treatments described are not those of modern medicine, nor are the problems they raise identical in all respects. Given the primitive technology, for example, certain questions that have arisen today could scarcely be imagined. Nevertheless, we are not entirely bereft of guidance in the ancient sources, and although the circumstances today may be new, the moral issues that arise often turn out to be similar in principle."2

As well, having definitive Buddhist positions to complex issues is hindered by the fact that there are many different philosophical schools of Buddhist thought, and different Buddhist traditions that have arisen from both the existence of these schools and from the influence of the various cultures into which Buddhism has been assimilated.

"Since Buddhism is an amorphous movement with no clear hierarchy or locus of authority, it is difficult to make authoritative statements of the kind "The Buddhist view on issue x is..." without qualificatrion. Lay Buddhusts typically turn to their clergy for religious and moral guidance, and these in turn base their opinions mainly on canonical scriptures... Despite the variety of Buddhist schools and sects, however, it does make sense to speak of a "Buddhist view" at least as far as our present purposes are concerned. There is a good deal of consistency amongst the major schools in the field of ethics, both in terms of the dominant pattern of reasoning employed and in the conclusions reached on specific issues. It therefore seems fair to speak of a "mainstream tradition," a term which here denotes the common moral core which can be extracted from the different movements, schools and sects."2

The same applies to this exploration. As difficult as it is to pin down a specific Buddhist answer to the complicated question of whether the harvesting of organs can fit into Buddhist practice and ethics or not, specifically looking at how Tantric Buddhist sources address death and the body will help us extract principles that can help inform what, in general, might be the Tantric perspective on harvesting the human body for organs and tissue. Tantric Buddhism, as a psycho-physiological spiritual system of mental development, is most useful here because of its heavy emphasis on analysing, replicating and manipulating the death process. It is also of great interest to see how the Tantric perspective relates to the medical models of harvesting, which are based on the scientific methodology for determining death.



Tantric Buddhist view of the body

The body as the indispensable basis for enlightenment

Often Buddhism is accused of neglecting the needs of the body, and even of abusing it, in the hopes of achieving spiritual attainments. The cause of this misunderstanding comes from Buddhism being essentially an ascetic tradition. A crucial part of the life story of Buddhism's mendicant founder before becoming enlightened are the extreme mortifications in which he engaged. Although he gave up such practices in the extreme, they still played a great part in his development of perfect concentration and paved a great deal of the way to the doors of liberation and omniscience. A large membership of the Buddhist religion are practitioners who engage in ongoing ascetic practices, such as celibacy, daily fasting, not touching money and wearing simple clothing, to name a few. There are even thirteen extra ascetic practices that a monk can engage in, such as living entirely outdoors only using a tree as shelter and never lying horizontally, which would necessitate sleeping upright. These are not outdated practices only done during the time of the Buddha. Modern, long-term retreatants in the Tibetan tradition often do not lie down during the course of their retreat, and spend all of their time in a box. Retreat manuals advise the meditator to refrain from stretching the legs out, although this admonishment is sometimes used as twilight language referring to the avoidance of mental distraction in general during retreat. Even a householder Buddhist, or a non-Buddhist, who receives meditation instruction will be advised to temporarily engage in the mild-asceticism of putting mind first during the course of the session by ignoring the innumerable calls from the body to address aches and pains through movement. Such a lack of movement also can also be criticised by modern medicine as a contributing factor to the development of physical problems such as deep vein thrombosis, and to be sure, there are many modern examples of yogis, such as the incredible Tibetan master Dilgo Kyentse Rinpoche, being unable to walk after years of retreat. Be this as it may, the ascetic practices of the monastic and the meditator clearly show an emphasis on depriving the body of normal leisure to assist in the strengthening of the mind. The result is a sweeping generalisation of Buddhism being a body-denying practice. An extreme example of how Buddhism's view on the place of the body in relation to spiritual practice is seen by others, we can look at how Pope John-Paul II very neatly and categorically sums up Buddhist practice in his book "Crossing the Threshold of Hope":
The "enlightenment" experienced by Buddha comes down to the conviction that the world is bad, that it is the source of evil and of suffering for man. To liberate oneself from this evil, one must free oneself from this world, necessitating a break with the ties that join us to external realities existing in our human nature, in our psyche, in our bodies. 3
Although not a very accurate barometer on the common views held by modern society, the Pope and his views surely influence millions of religious followers. Another misinterpretation of the Buddhist practitioner's relationship with the body can even be seen in pop-culture. A recent re-make of a song by the grunge band "Nirvana" has the vocalists telling us that "Nirvana means freedom from suffering...and the external world." Associating Buddhism with the goal of transcending the body (or ‘the world’ as synonymous with all things external to mind) may be traced to seeing no distinction between Buddhism and other Indian religions, such as Hinduism and Jainism, which do indeed emphasize the hindrance the body is to practice. The Jain practice of religious fasting to hasten the sloughing off of form, and Hindu stories abound of Yogis losing awareness of (or even , while in trance, entirely leaving behind) their bodies, both are examples of viewing the body as something to go beyond. The Buddhist Tantric perspective is, however, very different. This is shown in the following couplet by the eighth century Mahasiddha Saraha:
“Saraha says: It seems to me for Jains there is no freedom: the body deprived of the real only gains isolation.
The commentary explains Saraha here is mocking the Jain concern with transcending the body; as a tantrika, he believes that it is only within the body that liberation can be found; as the Hevajra Tantra (2:2, 35) remarks, "Without a body, wherefore bliss? One cannot then speak of bliss." 4


Among other texts, The Lam-Rim Chenmo by Lama Tsong Khapa makes it abundantly clear that the importance of the precious human rebirth, precious even beyond celestial forms and beings in the formless realms, is that it is only from such a form that one can achieve full enlightenment. From the Tantric Buddhist perspective, the ordinary body is manipulated and transformed in order to cause psychic experiences which lead to bliss and realisations. Although the Tantric psycho-physiological system will be explained in greater detail in the next section, here are some highlights of the scope Tantric practise, which starts off with gross and subtle form and which yields great results:

"With the completion process yogic practices, the yogin was said to encounter the transformation of the ordinary winds, channels, elements, fluids, and letters that constitututed his subtle body (vajrakaya). In particular, the winds associated with the ordinary physiological activities, known as the "karmic winds" (karmavayu), would be guided into the central channel and thereby transformed into the gnostic wind (jnanavayu), so that the varieties and attributes of gnosis envisioned by Buddhists would become attained through these yogic practices...with respect to the primary goal...the yogin was said to observe directly in a controlled manner the experiences of the dissolution of the elements, which unfold in an uncontrolled experience for those at the point of death...The completion process is said to purify death, through the union of phenomenal appearance and emptiness." 5

Not only is the body in general used in Tantric exercises to trigger special experiences, the process of death is of particular significance in seeking spiritual achievement. Again, in order to attain bliss and insight,

"a yogi seeks to cause these winds in their coarse and subtle forms to dissolve into the very subtle life-bearing wind at the heart. This yoga mirrors a similar process that occurs at death and involves concentration on the channels and channel-centres inside the body." 6

To engage in an exploration of death using Tantric literature is sensible because, as shown in the above passages, the process of death holds great importance to the tantrika, an ordained or lay-person practicing the esoteric methods of the Diamond Vehicle of Buddhism (Skt: Vajrayana). Such emphasis has led to a very sophisticated analysis of the stages of dying. The Tantric perspective is unique in seeing death as both an objective event, one that can be observed by others, as well as s subjective event with predictable components. In Tantric practise not only are gross and the subtle aspects of the death process incorporated in daily meditation and visualisation practices, which His Holiness the Dalai Lama enjoys joking about when he mentions that he dies and is reborn several times each morning and evening, but also the practitioner aims to enter consciously (even wilfully) into the actual process of death and its stages used as "grist for the mill" in the achievement of realisations. The ultimate goal for the Tantric Buddhist is liberation from cyclic existence and the achievement of the omniscience and unending compassion of a Fully Enlightened Buddha. This is the aim of every Buddhist practice, from the Bodhisattvayana (Skt: “Awakening Mind Vehicle”; sometimes called Mahayana, Skt: “Great Vehicle,” referring to the Sanskrit lineage) perspective, to which the Vajrayana belongs. This includes those practices at issue here: those which represent and manipulate the death process.

"Buddhist tantra...is aimed at stopping death..and transforming [it] into Buddhahood. This is done through a series of yogas that are modelled on the process of death...until the yogi gains such control over them that he or she is no longer subject to dying. Since these yogas are based on simulating death, it is important for the yogi to know how humans die - the stages of death and the physiological reasons behind them." 6

Tantra is an esoteric tradition. It is important to recognise this. The breaking of its secrecy has been blamed for the degeneration of the Dharma both in India and Tibet. In modern times the accessibility of Tantra is apparent both in bookstores and libraries, as well as in temples. The screening-process for involvement in Tantra has changed, for better and for worse. Someone might get involved in Tantra prematurely, without the basis of ethical discipline or even a basic understanding of the teachings of the Buddha. Alternatively, the colourful world of Tantra can be a way to draw someone towards practices that they otherwise would not have exposure to, and which could benefit their mind, and by extension, benefit those they come into contact with. There is a parallel in the wide dissemination of Jewish mysticism in the kabbalah movement. The benefit of releasing some of the secret information found in esoteric practices is that this information, which might not be found elsewhere, can be of great benefit in that it uniquely informs current, everyday situations. Particularly, in the case of exploring the process of dying from the Tantric perspective, such an elaborate description of the gross and subtle, and the physiological and psychological aspects of death, can help both those who are dying and those who are caring for the dying. For our specific purposes here, we will look at how the Tantric perspective on death might help inform decision making around the harvesting of tissue and organs from humans, an area usually reserved for the medical sciences.

The body free of mind as mere composite of elements

Unlike in Chinese and Japanese Buddhist cultures, where the integrity of the body is revered and required as part of the process of the person transforming into an ancestor, Tantric Buddhist culture sees the corpse as matter only. Non-Tantric traditions of Buddhism, both Mahayana and non-Mahayana, also share this feeling:

"Followers of Theravada and Japanese Zen emphasized that...the body is merely a collection of disposable parts that has no usefulness after death....They believed that a person's consciousness leaves the body at the time of death, so there is no arm in touch, washing or cutting the body." 7

The corpse is treated with the due respect of having been the vessel for the departed mind, but it is no longer connected to the consciousness of the dead and thus serves no remaining purpose. As a result, traditionally in Tibet, a culture based on the principles of Tantric Buddhism, a corpse is disposed of in one of two ways: cremation or sky-burial. There are practical reasons for both, because of the environment in Tibet, but the sky-burial is particularly significant in transforming the mundane act of the disposal of a cadaver into a religious event. The sky-burial involves cutting the body into pieces on a mountaintop, reducing the pieces through pounding and mixing them with flour before finally feeding the mixture to scavenger animals, such as vultures.

“Sky burial takes place after a religious specialist (lama) with a special talent for divination determines that the consciousness of the deceased has left the corpse and after the prescribed prayers, readings, and rituals have been performed. For Tibetans, to dismember the corpse and distribute it to birds and wild animals is not savage, but a deeply meaningful, spiritual act. The ritual not only helps bring closure to human relationships, but also benefits the deceased through the giving of food to numerous living beings. Because of the difficulty of burial in the frozen Tibetan soil and the dearth of firewood for cremation, distributing parts of the corpse in a final act of generosity is not considered macabre but rather a symbol of the dissolution that awaits all living things at death… sky burial is regarded as a virtuous solution to a practical dilemma.”2

Two Buddhist principles are apparent in the Tibetan practise of disposal of the body. Detachment from form and the loved one arises from seeing the body in a dramatic display of its composite nature and being an empty vessel no longer housing the departed’s mind, and the practise of generosity is performed by giving as food that which all beings consider to be most precious: the body. This Tantric view of, and approach to, the body free of mind will greatly influence our pending exploration of organ harvesting.


Tantric Buddhist View of the Death Process

In extracting the pith aspects of the dying process from the Tantric Buddhist perspective, we will concentrate mainly on commentaries to the Guhyasamaya Tantra (Skt: "Secret Communion"; Tib: dPal gsang-ba ‘dus-pa’i rgyud.) This text and practise is from the class of Highest Yoga Tantras, and many sources point to it as being the most crucial and earliest of the Tantric texts.

“Guhyasamaja is referred to as ‘the supreme and king of all Tantras,’…the existence of [which] is…essential for the survival of the Tantras…and [which] without relying upon…there is no way to attain supreme enlightenment.”8

Although its authorship is debated and is sometimes seen as a collection with multiple contributors, one of the founders of the Yogacara (Skt; Mind-only) school of Buddhist philosophy, the Fourth Century scholar-monk Arya Asanga, is generally credited with penning the work. The commentaries cited here are both by Yangchen Gawai Lodoe, “an eminent saint scholar of eighteenth century Tibet,” 8 and whose full titles are “Lamp Thoroughly Illuminating the Presentation of the Three basic Bodies – Death, Intermediate State and Rebirth”6 and “An Eloquent Presentation – A Port of Entry for the Fortunate Ones into the paths and Grounds of Mantra According to the Glorious Guhyasamaja of the Arya (Nagarjuna) Tradition.” 8
Generally speaking, the Tantric presentation on death revolves around the body and mind as mapped out according to the basic molecular elements of earth and water, the excited elements referred to as ‘fire,’ and a system of channels, winds and drops. The parts of the body comprised of the molecular elements of earth and water do not require mention, but not as obvious is the fact that, in this system, the “fire constituent [refers to] the warmth that maintains the body.”6 As they are terms foreign to our modern scientific jargon, the channels, winds and drops deserve expansion.

“Wind refers to currents of air or energy that perform the physical functions such as swallowing and serve as ‘mounts’ of consciousness. The channels are the veins, arteries, ducts, nerve pathways and so forth, through which flow blood, lymph, bile, wind and so on. The drops are essential fluids that course through the channels.” 6

Already we can see that the Tantric model is unique. With the very mention of ‘energy’ and ‘consciousness’ we depart from our familiar medical/scientific approach to the human as reducible to matter and electricity. This foreshadows some vastly different aspects in the traditions of Tantric Buddhism and medical science in their explanations of the process of death, and thus inevitable differences as well in the decisions and activities that are borne from these explanations.
Having laid out the context of the human being as a combination of matter, subtle matter and consciousness, we can now look at what occurs amidst this collection during the process of death.

'The process of death involves eight stages of dissolution of the elements. Initially, our earth element dissolves into the water element; then, the water into the fire element; the fire into the wind element; the wind into the element of consciousness; the consciousness into the mind of white appearance; the mind of white appearance into the mind of radiant red increase; the mind of radiant red increase into the mind of black near-attainment and subsequently the mind of the clear light of death dawns." 8

The dissolutions of the elements into one another does not actually mean that one dissolves into the other. This fact is made obvious by the simple logic that the elements actually contadict each other and cannot abide in the same location simultaneously. What occurs is the strength of the dissolving element to support that aspect of the body reduces and that of the next element increases, resulting in external and internal signs. The external signs are changes in the observable body, and the internal signs are visions experienced by the dying person. Thus, the process of death is both a physiological and a psychological one.

"The physiology of death revolves around changes in the winds, channels and drops. Psychologically, due to the fact that consciousness of varying grossness and subtlety depend on the winds like a rider on a horse, their dissolving or loss of ability to serve as a basis of consciousness includes radical changes in conscious experience."6

Most pivotal in the process of death, and for our purposes here as well, is determining what is considered the end of the death process. As with the preceding steps in the process of death, there is both a mental and physical aspect to the end-stage. The final stage of the dissolutions, as mentioned above, is the mind of clear light. His Holiness the Dalai Lama also refers to this stage and state of mind as the “final subtle mind…of death,”6 clearly showing that the Tantric Buddhist outlook holds death as also being an experiential one, rather than merely a series of catastrophic failures in the operating systems of a living organism. His Holiness describes the occurrences during the very last moments of life:

“The warmth finally gathers at the heart, from which the consciousness exits. Those particles of matter, of combined semen and blood, into which the consciousness initially entered in the mother’s womb at the beginning of the life, become the centre of the heart; and from that very same point the consciousness ultimately departs at death. Immediately thereupon, the intermediate state begins...” 6

Thus, in addition to the appearance clear light mind, there is the movement of heat and the essential drops as final physical events preceding death. There are also physical signs which follow death, after the mind and body have separated. “When the body begins to emit a foul odor, it is a sure sign that the consciousness is no longer present. In some cases, a…drop will appear at the area of the nostrils.” 7
Most sources indicate the appearance of a white drop at the male sexual organ and/or a red drop at the nostril as the strongest signs that the mind has left the body.
To summarize, from the Tantric Buddhist perspective“…it is the experience of clear light that is the factor that determines the death of an individual” 7 and death is final when the mind leaves the body.

Medical Science’s View of Death

"...the modern era has involved an exclusion or repression of death." 11

The West in general, and the world of medical science in particular, are renowned for being death-denying in view and in practice. We used hushed tones and special vernacular when broaching the subject, and medical practitioners have great difficulty talking to families about the reality of death and often prefer to offer almost limitless life-sustaining heroics to avoid the subject. When we say “life-sustaining,” we could just as easily say “death-delaying” in futile cases where recovery is statistically low. Secularised death is seen philosophically as the absolute end of the body, mind and the person. Even when autonomic systems are kept functioning artificially, the predominant view holds that “…the person no longer ‘exists’ because of the loss of total brain function.” 12 In the hospital environment we can easily get the impression that death is seen as being inherently bad in being opposed to life and the final result of the failure to cure disease. Although consciously holding to the position of "the intrinsic badness of death" is very difficult when we know of cases where "death is welcomed and desired (that is, good)...by an autonomous patient, and where a peaceful death is clearly in the interest of the patient,"13 it still plays out operationally in the field when dealing with dying patients and their families. The frequency of futile treatment in critical and chronic care settings are a testament to this fact. In the service of sustaining life, all other aspects of the purpose of care, and the needs of the person themselves, are made secondary. Although both the medical tradition and Buddhism hold life in the highest regard, that death is held at bay at all costs may be a misunderstanding of the ethical principle of the sanctity of life. Although ideally seen in logical relation to other ethical principles,

"…[one] version of the sanctity of life principle...holds that life as such is valuable to such an extent and in such a way that, in life and death situations, preventing the death of the patient is of overriding importance [which can lead to futile treatment and to the jeopardy of the patients' well-being and autonomy, two other ethical principles]... What matters according to the sanctity of life principle, it seems, is mere biological existence. The focus is solely on whether or not a person's body is biologically alive or not. The focus is not on what has been termed the biographical life of the person whose body it is...[meaning] the life as experienced from within." 13

Even the current clinical definition of death used at the bed-side in Intensive Care Units points to the precedence given to the body, rather than the person, as determining the status of human life. When it is held that "death is an irreversible biological event that consists of permanent cessation of the critical functions of the organism as a whole," 10 the human is an organism rather than living being with a conscious experience. Despite our slant towards a secularised (free of spiritual principles which include the inner life and the continuation of mind after biological death) and materialistic approach towards death, the very existence of a system of ethics, and the debates that emerge from such important issues as those that arise around life and death (the most common and heated being those concerning abortion and euthanasia) shows that we have set ourselves up to explore reality together. We know that we need each other to make the wisest, or most beneficial, decisions. We avoid death, but ultimately we must deal with it and cannot ignore it indefinitely. New technologies have forced us to deal with new medical circumstances that have led to a

"renewed attention towards death...[that] appears perhaps most clearly in relation to the care of death and dying in...palliative medicine and in the hospice movement, in the question of active and passive euthanasia and in the definition of the brain death criteria related to the emergence of the new transplant surgery." 11

However, with the advent of increasingly subtle and powerful means of perceiving and correcting problems in the human organism,

"in a way the very purpose of health care seems to be to fight against death, inasmuch as it aim often is to prevent death or to postpone it...[and, as a result,] sometimes modern high-tech biomedicine is accused of ignoring the inescapability of death.” 14

On the other hand, it is heartening that although we, individually and as a society, tend towards hiding and avoiding even the topic of death, it is safe to say that "...when concerned with death from 'natural causes' virtually everyone agrees that...living longer does not always mean having a better life." 13
Additionally, although we can point to a predominance of relating to death with avoidance and fear, stemming from a materialistic (or biological-centered) and even nihilistic perspective towards this phenomenon, there are secular thinkers, practitioners and movements, such as those found in ethics and holistic health, who inject the debate with a more well-rounded outlook which sees the person as a interconnected combination of mind, body, non-corporeal energy (which is seen as not different from mind in Buddhism, but which is often referred to as spirit or soul by others) and relationship with the community. Here are a few examples:

“…death of an individual extends beyond the physical changes of the body and into a changing of society’s treatment of that individual and his or her corpse.” 15

”…the concept of death is not purely a biological one: death is not only a biological condition. It may be viewed as a cessation of experience, the departure of the soul from the body, or a passage into ‘another mode of existence.’” 15a




Harvesting tissue and organs from the human body

Medical criteria

“Any criteria for determining death…would have to carry not only strong clinical weight, but also be significant in its moral symbolism. This is because death alters the relationship between an individual and society, and shifts the line of what may be acceptable behaviour and action upon that individual’s body.” 15

The determination of death is the key component in the issue of organ harvesting because “for organ donation to be successful…the process of harvesting the organs must begin immediately after clinical death…”7 This requirement leads to a great sense of urgency to acquire the working organs in a timely manner. To give a sense of the haste required to maintain organ viability, “the interval between arrest and a declaration of death is as short as two minutes in Pittsburgh…or as long as five to ten minutes in most of Europe.” 17 To be sure, this anxiety over viable organ procurement is often blamed for the ever-changing definition of death, to the point where critics of both cardiac and brain-centered criteria for death determination accuse practitioners of removing organs from living donors, thus causing their death.
What is this ‘clinical death’ then? Rather than describing an end to either brain or cardiac activity, the term ‘clinical death,’ or

"somatic death...([which is] also known as…physical death, body death)...is characterized by the discontinuance of cardiac activity and respiration, and eventually leads to the death of all body cells from lack of oxygen, although for approximately six minutes after somatic death—a period referred to as clinical death—a person whose vital organs have not been damaged may be revived. However, achievements of modern biomedical technology have enabled the physician to artificially maintain critical functions for indefinite periods." 18

Although “in the early days of transplantation, organs were removed from recently deceased donors who were declared dead when their hearts stopped beating,” 15 in the context of modern medical science, brain-death has become the standard, crucial factor in ascertaining suitability for harvesting the human body. The definition of "brain death is the complete and irreversible loss of cerebral and brain stem function.” 10 Unlike both the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems, which can be restarted, restored and maintained interventionally, the varying degrees of brain death are irreversible. Therefore, there essentially is a one-way reliance of the cardiopulmonary aggregation on brain function and thus “in most countries and most situations, brain death is considered to be equivalent to cardiopulmonary death." 19 One reason for the favouring of brain-centered criteria in determining death is that irreversibility is easier to establish. Irreversibility, or the criterion of "’strong irreversibility’ (death beyond the reach of resuscitative efforts to restore life),” 17 is considered essential to leave no doubt that the death is not caused by the organ procurement and therefore removes the physician’s culpability for causing a donor’s death. Those who question cardiac-centered criteria in determining death point to the difficulty in ascertaining irreversibility. They

“wonder…whether the use of a cardiac standard is appropriate for use in the procurement of organs. Since…if the patient were treated, restoration of spontaneous circulation could occur, critics have questioned whether death is being declared prematurely. They argue that the waiting time between heart-stoppage and the initiation of the organ removal process is insufficient to ensure that the donor’s heart has irreversibly stopped and cannot ever be restarted. They argue that because the heart’s function may be restored for a long time after cardiac arrest, the brain should be the sentinel organ for death determination. After all, irreversible cessation of brain function occurs in a shorter time frame…” 15

The determination of brain death might seem nebulous due to the organ’s complexities and as yet unsolved mysteries concerning its functioning, however, based on vital contingencies, it is indeed measurable.

"The diagnosis of brain death can usually be made clinically, at the bed side. The criteria for brain death require certain conditions regarding the clinical setting...: the underlying cause is understood; and confounding from drug intoxication or poisoning, metabolic derangements, and hypothermia have been ruled out...also required is evidence of absence of brain function on neurologic examination...demonstrat[ing] coma, no cerebral response to external stimuli, and absent brain stem function." 19

There also is non-neurologic, physical testing methodology for measuring brain-death:

"Tests demonstrating absent blood flow to the brain are generally accepted as establishing whole brain death; it is axiomatic that the brain without a blood supply is dead... Brain death is usually accompanied by elevated intracranial pressure... When this exceeds systemic arterial pressure, there is no cerebral blood flow." 19

Brain-death is not a judgement call made on the part of the physician. “Determinations of death are not arbitrary; they are more or less precise determinations of an organism's state based upon valid concepts skilfully deployed by physicians in the interests of patients.” 17 In accepting brain-death as the main requisite for organ harvesting, as opposed to cardiac-death, the organs can be kept viable longer by keeping them fed with oxygenated blood through sustaining the cardio-pulmonary system mechanically. This allows for valuable decision-making and transplant preparation time. The haste seen in cardiac-death centered criteria scenarios, due to the small window of viability, is removed. Although there are a great many arguments against the brain-death centered criteria model, many of which we will see when considering the Buddhist perspective, it can be praised for allowing precious time for both medical practitioners and bereaved families to move to their respective next phase in relating to the deceased.

Buddhist criteria

The main concern for the Buddhist in determining death is the presence or absence of mind. With the exception of Buddhist cultures which maintain that the integrity of the body is necessary for the departed to transform into an ancestor, such as is the case in Japan and China, organ donation after it has been established that the mind has left the body is seen as a positive activity and, it can be said, even encouraged in support of the practices of generosity and the accumulation of merit. In Buddhist practice in general there is no question as to the benefit of offering any part of one’s body, while living or dead. Although

"there is no official consensus among Buddhist communities as to the determination of death or the permissibility of organ donation...most Buddhist communities permit organ donation as a matter of individual conscience and consider it an act of compassion and generosity that can serve as a condition for realizing nirvana." 16

In Tantric Buddhism the practice of Chod (Tib: “Cutting [Attachment to the Body]”) is a tool for reducing the obsessive clinging the mind has to our material form by imagining the offering of one’s body, after the mind has exited the crown of the head and has transformed into a deity, as food to unfortunate beings in the lower realms. Chod is modelled after the actions of Shakyamuni Buddha in a former life when he gave his body to a hungry tigress who, out of desperate hunger, was about to eat her cubs. Stories of such sacrifices abound in Buddhist lore. The Indian scholar-saint Atisha meditated in a cave for twelve years with no apparent results. It wasn’t until, out of compassion, he used a piece of his own flesh to coax maggots out of the festering wound of a sick dog, that he achieved a vision of the future Buddha Maitreya. It is an understatement to say that "Buddhists of various backgrounds...support...the idea of donating one's vital organs to save someone's life as consistent with Buddhist values of generosity and loving-kindness." 7
Unlike in the world of modern medicine, it is the cardiac-centered criteria that seems most suitable in facilitating the transference of consciousness, the chief Buddhist concern at death-time. One specialist in both medical and Buddhist practice concludes that “as long as there is heat in the body, and a pulse and respiration, or any reflexes, it is best to avoid disturbing the patient, in case the consciousness is present.” 7 One attorney and Zen scholar shows the primary issues for the Buddhist practitioner around post-mortem use of the body to be the gifting of any anatomical part of the body (organs, tissue, corneas) in general or specifically for research purposes, the performance of an autopsy or embalming, and disposal by burial or cremation. He offers a sample health care proxy which considers each of the above options, and for each great care is taken particularly to indicate how soon after cardiac death such events are allowed to take place according to the practitioner's advance directives. 9 If organ harvesting is hindered by a time-interval required by the wait for a sign or event to establish the absence of mind, “unless a person is extremely well-trained, the consciousness is likely to be disturbed by the surgery and it may be best to avoid organ transplantation.” 7
There is also much support for the Buddhist model of death determination following cardiac-centered criteria as a direct result of rejecting those based on brain death-centered criteria.

"Some Buddhist arguments...emphasize the body's development from an original mass, such that no particular organ like the brain should take priority in determining death. Given this lack of hierarchy, some would argue that the dissipation of heat after the last breath favours criteria based upon the cessation of cardio-pulmonary activity rather than brain-death criteria." 16

Even with the onset of any degree of brain-death, if the body is alive artificially by way of cardio-pulmonary mechanical heroics, it is widely held in Buddhism that the mind will not leave the body. Although there is much scriptural and commentarial support for this, perhaps this is too bold a statement. It may be more mild to say that “if the heart has not stopped beating and the bodily heat has not yet disappeared, there is reason to believe that the consciousness may still be present in the body.” 7 A patient in a persistent vegetative state (PVS) still meets the “minimum requirement…for assuming the existence of a person…[which] is the existence of consciousness.” 7 As a result,

"some concern does exist among Buddhists concerning the criterion of brain-stem death, to which organ transplantation from cadavers is closely linked. To declare death on the basis of this criterion seems premature to some, and not in keeping with Buddhist scriptural teachings concerning the point when death occurs. The ancient sources state that death occurs when three things - vitality, heat, and consciousness - leave the body." 2

Dividing that which is required to leave the body in the valid determination of death into three does not negate our strong premise that the main component in defining death is the departure of mind, and that Buddhists can easily rely on cardiac-centered criteria. Unlike with brain-death, cardiac death necessarily prompts the departure of mind, although some time might elapse. However, with the departure of mind, heat and vitality cannot remain.
Looking at cardiac-centered criteria as being in opposition to brain-death centered criteria gives preference to viewing death as “…the death of the whole psycho-spiritual organism rather than any one of its parts." 2 The following statement by the same author, one who is admirable in his active work in bridging Buddhism and bioethics, gives us reason to pause:

"...since the traditional Buddhist criteria for determining death are biological in nature Buddhism would reject any definition of death that focused solely on the loss of consciousness or the higher brain functions controlled by the neocortex."2

This statement is true insofar as the biological status of the human organism is the only ordinary means we have of determining the presence or absence of mind, since certain signs and symptoms give indication of the latter, which is of the utmost importance. However, declaring that Buddhist determine death using biology might lead one to believe that Buddhists rely on the functionality of the body alone. This smacks of materialism contrary to the Buddhist emphasis on experience and consciousness, in that it does not take into account that it is the status of mind that actually defines death. Any bodily state used to determine death is simply a way of perceiving indirectly what is happening with the mind, a non-physical and non-visible phenomenon. Again, the Buddhist stance that mind is the key factor in establishing death clearly informs decision-making around invasive activities, since, “from a Tibetan Buddhist perspective…any intervention before...the experience of clear light, especially in the case of a skilled meditation practitioner, is inadvisable.” 7
As mentioned earlier, there are objective signs that are agreed upon in the Tantric world as indicating the departure of mind, such as the appearance of fluid at orifices or the smell of decay. There are additional ways that traditionally are accepted as valid methods of establishing that the consciousness has left the body. Earlier we saw, in the sky-burial description, that a religious with expertise in divination has the ability to determine the mind’s departure. However, it would be more accurate to say that someone with an appropriate level of clairvoyance can perceive directly the mind which has moved into the Bardo (Tib: “In-between State”), referring to the state of existence between death and rebirth. Lastly, there is the Tantric practice of Phowa (Tib: “Transference of Consciousness”) which, if performed by a qualified master (who can either be the patient themselves or one practicing the ritual for the benefit of the patient), can act as the final push for the mind’s exit. In such a case, the exit would also be auspicious, meaning one that occurs through an upper orifice or through the crown of the head and necessarily leading to a fortunate rebirth. Any of these means of determining the departure of mind, signs, clairvoyant pronouncement or ritual, would, in general, satisfy the Tantric Buddhist that the appropriate time for organ procurement has arrived. In the absence of these, standard best practice with Buddhist patients suggests that "as far as possible, it is best to leave the body alone and in quietude for two to three days after the pulse and breathing have stopped, or until the corpse begins to decompose.”7 To harken back to the earlier discussion regarding the NHBD (non-heart-beating-donor), it is clear in the Buddhist approach that there is a great concern with how soon after cardiac death the body is manipulated in any way, especially invasively with organ procurement or autopsy, if cardiac-centered criteria dominate. There is no predictable schedule for the departure of mind. It can happen before three days pass, but it does not occur after three days with an ordinary being. The only exception to this principle is in the case of the Yogi (Skt: “hermit meditator”) who can remain in a state of meditation for more than a week with cardio-pulmonary vital signs absent. In such a case the only remaining observable signs are heat in the chest and freedom from decay and odour. The mind has not left, and any invasive activity would be inappropriate.
Interestingly, there also exists scientific research that reinforces both the cardiac-based criteria model and the Buddhist perspective which both favour the view that the brain-dead patient is not deceased:

“Studies of brain dead patients, some of whom have been kept "alive" for long periods, suggest that in fact the brain is not essential to many aspects of organismal integration and that bodily integration may not be best thought of as localized to a particular organ. If this is so, the notion of brain-mediated bodily integration does not offer a reason to suppose that brain dead patients are really dead.”17

Based on many sources, it is safe to say that the Buddhist stance leans more towards time elapsed after cardiac death as the crucial factor to ensure that the consciousness has left, and following this is the only appropriate time to perform invasive activities with the corpse because there is no longer a danger of disturbing transmigration. To say that the departure of mind is the point-of-no-return in the death process, and the mind does not leave until after multi-organ failure which is caused by, or accompanies, cardiac death is in line with the scientific definition of death as "an irreversible, biological event that consists of permanent cessation of the critical functions of the organism as a whole."10 Because the mind can remain in the body of the patient experiencing brain-death with cardio-pulmonary assistance, it is the multi-organ failure brought about by cardiac death which, despite a varying time-lag, necessarily brings about the movement of the mind into the in-between state.

Conclusion

We can now say assuredly that the Buddhist stance on organ harvesting is within the fine balance of two issues: offering body parts as an encouraged and powerful practice of generosity which not only helps others but helps one’s own spiritual development, and ensuring that the transmigration of the mind at death is not disturbed. We will also take for granted, based on the Buddhist proscription against taking life, that any activity that causes the premature death of a patient, not by withdrawal of treatment but by invasive procedures, is out of the question. Although modern medicine has moved away from cardiac-centered criteria for determining death, the long-established usage of this model can still be very useful to its proponents. There are many indications that this model is more representative of what a Buddhist needs at death time, as opposed to the brain-death criteria model of death determination. Simply, our Tantric sources require the gathering of heat at the heart before the departure of consciousness, which mutually contradicts the scenario of determining death based on loss of brain activity with an otherwise functioning body, mechanically supported or not. In such a case, the heat of the body remains and therefore the mind has not departed. Some might argue that the example of the Tantric yogi in death meditation is counter to the cardiac-centered criteria model of death determination because, despite the yogi being considered not-dead, the cardio-pulmonary signs have ceased. This can be refuted by considering that the Buddhist model of cardiac-centered criteria for death determination is unique in having additional requirements accompanying cardiac-pulmonary failure to determine death. These are: heat departing the body; and either the appearance of the prescribed biological signs (orifice drops, odor of decay), or the defined time-period after cardiac death elapsing (2-3 days), or particular spiritual events (ritual performance or clairvoyant pronouncement of mind departure). Care must be given to these idiosyncrasies when using the cardiac-centered criteria model of death determination in the context of organ harvesting with the Buddhist. We see these needs built into the contemporary Buddhist proxies which give full autonomy to the decision maker who initiates the advance directives of post-mortem care, which can be the patient themselves or their representative. These documents are a very helpful resource as they clearly tackle not only whether or not certain post-mortem invasive procedures are allowable by the Buddhist, but also when these activities can appropriately take place after cardiac-death.


Bibliography

1) The Dictionary of Medical Ethics; Duncan, Dunstan & Welbourne, 1981

2) Keown, Damien Buddhism and Bioethics (Religious Perspectives in Bioethics); Taylor and Francis 2004

3) John Paul II, Pope; Crossing the Threshold of Hope; Knoph 1995

4) Jackson, Roger; Tantric Treasures: Three Collections of Mystical verse from Buddhist India; Oxford University press 2004

5) Davidson, Ronald M. Indian Esoteric Buddhism (A Social History of the Tantric Movement);
Columbia University Press, 2002

6) Lati Rinbochay and Hopkins, Jeffrey. Death, Intermediate State and Rebirth
in Tibetan Buddhism. Ithaca: Snow Lion, 1979

7) Tsomo, Karma Lekshe; Into the Jaws of Yama, Lord of Death (Buddhism, Bioethics and Death); State University of New York Press 2006

8) Lodoe, Yangchen Gawai. Paths and Grounds of Guhyasamaja (According to Arya Nagarjuna). Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, 199

9) Frank, Casey Living Organs & Dying Bodies (Tricycle: The Buddhist Review); Fall 1997

10) Wijdicks, EFM. Brain Death; Lippicott Williams and Wilkins, Philidelphia 2001

11) Sorenson, Anders Draeby The Problematization of Death in Modern Medicine; (Ethics, Rights and Death in Modern Medicine) Philosophia Press 2002

12) Thomasma, David C. The Ethics of Organ Retrieval (from The Ethics of Organ Transplantation); Elsevier Science 2001

13) Kappel, Klemens; The Morality of Euthanasia; (Ethics, Rights and Death in Modern Medicine) Philosophia Press 2002

14) Anderson, Svend; The Right to a Good Death; (Ethics, Rights and Death in Modern Medicine) Philosophia Press 2002

15) Ozark, Shelly; De Vita, Michael; Ethical Issues in Non-Heartbeating Cadaver Donors (from The Ethics of Organ Transplantation); Elsevier Science 2001

15a) Catherwood, J.F.; Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are “dead”?; Journal of Medical Ethics 18
1992

16) Shelton, Wayne; Balint, John; ( Editors) The Ethics of Organ Transplantation; Elsevier Science 2001

17) Huddle, Thomas S.; Schwartz, Michael A; Bailey, F Amos, Bos, Michael A; Death, organ transplantation and medical practice; (Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 2008, 3:5 (4 February 2008)

18) Dyer, Kirsti A. MD, MS, FT; Death; The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05.

19) Young, G Bryan MD, FRCPC Diagnosis of Brain Death; Up To Date Inc. 2008

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

A Principle of Justice in Palliative Care


A Principle of Justice in Palliative Care, by Sean Hillman
MA student, Religion (Buddhist Studies)/Bioethics
University Of Toronto
Department and Centre for the Study of Religion
Joint Centre for Bioethics

Feb. 2010

The fair equality of opportunity principle of justice as proposed by John Rawls in "Theory of Justice" does not provide sufficient grounds for the distribution of palliative care entitlements. Norman Daniels bases his arguments for health care distributive justice on the fair equality of opportunity principle in "Just Health Care," but in so doing, fails to properly account for the special case of distribution of resources for palliative care within the greater context of health care. From the perspective of this principle of justice, it is at times questionable whether palliative care even meets the requirements to warrant belonging under the umbrella of ‘health care’ and this problem will be addressed within. Regardless, establishing palliative care as a special case in resource distribution entitlements is crucial because that which makes palliative care special is exactly what causes it to not be amenable to support by the fair equality of opportunity principle of justice. Rawls makes ‘opportunity’ the open access to positions, or offices, and careers or jobs. ‘Positions’ can be either political or institutional but can be seen simply as employment positions, with varying degrees of power, in general. There is some overlap between the two but careers can be seen that which affords an individual the opportunity to have ‘success’ with the accumulation of wealth or income, an endeavor which forms a key part of this principle of justice. ‘Equality’ for Rawls has two aspects: disregard for social background on the one hand, and a firm regard for both predisposed talents and skills and the intention to exert effort to seize opportunity, which he calls ‘willingness.’ Daniels then extends and applies the fair equality of opportunity principle to justify resource entitlements in the context of health care based on the premise that the aim of such care is to return individuals to ‘normal-species functioning’ to ensure full participation in society over the course of an entire lifetime. Where Rawls’s fair equality of opportunity principle of justice fails in justifying palliative care entitlements is in the fact that the main recipient of palliative care, the dying human, is no longer participating in the active pursuit of positions or income. This can be contested in the case of the individual who receives palliative care over a length of time, such as in the case of someone who takes a while to die. We can reduce this argument by restricting the palliative period to the average length of stay of a palliative patient, measured in weeks, or to the time spent by an individual actively dying, measured in days or hours. Where Daniels’s application of the fair equality of opportunity principle of justice fails in justifying palliative care entitlements is in the fact that, unlike health care in general, the purpose of palliative care is not the return to normal-species functioning but, rather, to achieve comfort. Full participation in society over the course of an entire lifetime is no longer relevant because the lifespan is at an imminent end. The adjacent recipients of palliative care, those close to the dying human, those close to the dead human or the bereaved, and the remains of the dead human, must also be considered. There will be room as well to discuss some interpretive variances when we look at some of the parts of the fair equality of opportunity principle of justice individually, with respect specifically to a dying human: motivation, success and talents and skills.

First I will look at the reasoning in support of treating the phenomenon of palliative care as a special case within resource distribution in health care by taking recourse in the universality of the experience of dying, and pointing to the universality of the unique aspects of that experience for the dying human and those close to them. My selection of two unique aspects of the dying experience include: the total dependency of the dying human on the care of others, and an increased need for decision-making. I intended to look also at the increased reliance on spirituality but brevity prohibited this. Using these unique aspects, I will argue that they demand entitlements and that the fair equality of opportunity principle of justice does not provide sufficient grounds to support such entitlements.

Death is experienced by every sentient being, and thus every human being must necessarily die despite there being a vast variation in the manner in which this can occur. There are timely and untimely deaths, based on our conception of a typical lifespan. This can be specific to a geographical group in the sense that their standard of living, access to resources including health care, and technological advancement will influence the average lifespan within that geographical group. Regardless of average lifespan variances, it is safe to say that death which occurs at a chronological age approaching either side of pubescence would be agreed upon by most to be untimely. There are innumerable diseases which can interrupt life either by themselves, as in the case of a terminal disease, or combined and/or cumulative disease that ends in the catastrophic failure of an essential system in the human organism. This variation in the manner in which humans die does not defeat the idea that death is a universal human experience. A disease is merely an indirect cause of death. Ultimately it is the cessation of respiratory, circulatory or brain function (and cessation of any one of these necessarily makes for the cessation of the others) that causes death. This must occur to every human organism. Although this can be disparaged for being a statement of the obvious, it is important ground-work for what is to follow.

Dependency on others

Next, we must look at how palliative care is special because of the universality of the unique aspects of the experience for the dying human and those close to them. Firstly, the dying person becomes a dependant. Childlike in their vulnerability, it most often happens that they must be in diapers once again. Of course, this does not occur in the case of instantaneous death such as that which occurs with some traumatic injuries, but there is no need to mention instantaneous death because in looking at palliative care, we are dealing with a dying process of some length, even if very short. A discussion regarding resources designated for the treatment of the remains of the deceased and caring for the bereaved would still be relevant in the case of instantaneous death, but we will save that discussion and not pursue it in this paper. One might say that it is not very unique that the dying human becomes dependant because some of those that are disabled are also dependant. This is a true and an important point. Dying will always be intimately connected to any ideas formed around disability because one necessarily becomes disabled during the process of dying. Based on this fact, we can refute Daniels’s statement that “no one, except children or the congenitally handicapped, would have a claim on social resources to meet health-care needs”1 and include the dying since they share with children and the congenitally handicapped a vulnerability and varying degrees of mental and physical incompetence (which will be qualified in the decision-making section) which makes their very survival dependent on the care of others. We can avoid the refutation by including the dying in the category of the congenitally handicapped. A discussion around the reasoning behind Daniels’s exclusion of the handicapped from acquired injuries from such entitlements must also be shelved for now. Instead, we can state that, by definition, the ‘congenitally handicapped’ have a disabling condition present from birth which impedes normal species functioning and full co-operation in society over the course of a lifetime. From this perspective, death can be seen as a congenital condition, since to be born requires that one must die, at the very least after the natural degeneration of organs crucial for maintaining the living human organism results in their irreversible failure. This death from natural decay, colloquially put as "dying of old age" or a “dying naturally”, seems to not be the statistical norm. Even in the case of death from acquired injury, having a congenitally acquired human body makes the human organism susceptible to internal and external harm that can result in death. With the gift of the human body received from our parents comes a guarantee which is not a disease per se but a condition that, like some diseases, results in death. Have we established death and dying as congenital handicaps? Our inevitable demise comes as part and parcel with the human organism from birth, and impedes normal species functioning and full co-operation in society but not over the course of a full-lifetime. To be sure, death ends that very course of a lifetime, but one cannot say that death is an impediment over the course of a full lifetime. We cannot even begrudge death’s uncertainty and unexpected arrival at any possible point on the chronological timeline of a human life, potentially occurring from the time spent in the womb all the way to the limits of normal aging in this epoch. For there to be an automatic claim on social resources, such as in the case of the congenitally handicapped, do we have to meet the requirement of there being an impediment to normal species functioning and full co-operation in society over the course of a full-lifetime? No, because children are slated in this category by Daniels and the period of childhood, like the period of dying, is temporary. Perhaps, then, any impediment to normal species functioning and full co-operation in society gives entitlement to claims on resources. In this way, if with the fair equality of opportunity principle “individual variations in talents and skills determine…fair shares of the normal opportunity range…[and one] assum[es] these [variations] have already been corrected for the effects of social and natural disadvantages”2, dying as a natural disadvantage to social participation would, like childhood and congenital handicap, give automatic entitlement to resources. But this seems weak. From Rawls we know the correction made for social disadvantage in distribution questions. With regard to “social circumstances and such chance contingencies as accident and good fortune…distributive shares” should not be “improperly influenced by these factors so arbitrary from a moral point of view.”3 Ignoring, for the moment, his qualifications regarding similar talent, skill and willingness, generally people “should have the same prospects of success regardless of their initial place in the social system, that is, irrespective of income class into which they are born.”4 What correction, then, occurs to account for natural disadvantage? Also, perhaps the term “natural disadvantage” can be misused to include too many circumstances, such as merely being “down on one’s luck.” How far should it be extended? Perhaps, also, we should reject the inclusion of “dying” in the category of “congenital handicap” because it meets some but not all of the requirements of its definition, and reject the designation of dying as a natural disadvantage because unlike the other disadvantages, it occurs to everyone. Despite pervasive and systemic denial of death in some societies, no one would reasonably reject the reality of death. Is that enough to require entitlement? It appears as though the dependent status of the dying person would not move Rawls to require palliative resource entitlements, as Martin and Reidy’s following statement suggests:

“Rawls seemed to the critics to have inappropriately bracketed the family off from the wider concerns of social justice. As a result of this bracketing, they argued, his conception both of the citizen and of the human person was male-oriented, and beyond that was modeled almost exclusively on the fully formed and “normal” adult. One important feature, then, of Rawls’s focus was his relative neglect of what might be called dependent status (children, the old, the sick, the permanently disabled) and of those (largely women) who are their main caregivers.”5

Daniels does, however, account for dependency by suggesting entitlements for two of many categories of dependents, children and the congenitally handicapped. By extension, I hold that despite ‘dying’ not necessarily meeting all the requirements of the definition of ‘congenital handicap’ it should be included under dependency for entitlements. This is not defeated by Rawls’s neglect of dependency. I hold also that palliative resource entitlements are additionally strengthened by seeing dying as a natural disadvantage, even though it occurs to everyone. Although the time of its occurrence is not predictable, death’s inevitable occurrence is definite and not random in the way other disadvantages might be seen. The fair equality of opportunity principle of justice is thus not strong enough to justify palliative care entitlements because of the logical gymnastics needed to squeeze dying into Rawls’s and Daniel’s frameworks.

An alternate route to try and justify palliative care entitlements with the fair equality of opportunity principle is to look at palliative resources for those close to the dying and the dead (the bereaved). As established earlier, since the dying human is a dependent, like the child who is unquestionably a dependent, the entitlements afforded to the family based on their participation in society because of the fair equality of opportunity principle can extend to include the dying family member, in the same manner in which entitlements are extended to include dependent children. This is a satisfactory approach for certain circumstances, but it does not provide enough support for palliative care entitlements as a whole because it does not account for dying individuals who have no kin. Here we could also mention the heartbreaking phenomenon of pediatric palliation. Is a dying child, with compounded dependency, more entitled to resources? Perhaps. Such tragic situations certainly inspire emotional favor over other palliative care contexts.

Decision-making

Moving from the dependency of the dying human, next we look at another unique aspect of the dying experience: an increased need for decision-making. Necessarily, in a health care institution, a medical or nursing practitioner will need to determine the wishes of the client with a higher risk of mortality (increasing illness, invasive procedures, untreatable fatal disease and so on) in relation to what treatments and life-extending heroics they do and do not want under changing circumstances. Some common questions concern cardio-pulmonary resuscitation, intubation and ventilation among others. What makes palliative decision-making unique as compared to that occurring in health care in general is urgency and sensitivity. Due to the fact that circumstances can change quickly and dramatically in the case of a person with an increasing risk of mortality, difficult questions must be broached in advance. With a rapid turn of events, where there is no time to ask the person themselves what treatments they would or would not want under certain circumstances, sometimes an advance directive can be relied upon. We assume that the principle of autonomy is esteemed. The relevance of this unique decision-making context in palliative care, with increased risk of mortality leading to urgency and tackling the sensitive subject-matter of continuing or ending the operation of basic systems in the human organism, is found with the question of competency. There exist cases where a dying individual maintains their full capacity to reason until death, and thus can fully participate in informed decision-making about their care. However, since disease and the process of dying can detrimentally affect the human’s mental faculties, many individuals are unable to make informed decisions. There also may be situations where the individual may be able to reason clearly, but is physically unable to communicate. In both cases, ignoring advance directives or decisions by proxy, it is impossible to know the wishes of the individual. We will look at both possibilities: that in which an individual’s wishes are known as with those who are competent and communicative, and that in which an individual’s wishes are not known as with those who are incompetent or uncommunicative, and see if the fair equality of opportunity principle justifies resource entitlements that would require distribution as the outcome of the decisions made.

To effectively bring in this principle of justice, we need to look at the dying person’s participation in decision-making. For the competent and communicative dying individual, we can include their participation in decision-making as the continued participation in society as part of the normal-species functioning over the course of a lifetime. This would be supported by Daniel’s approach, and even Rawls speaks of the importance of individuals being “normal” and “fully cooperating members of society”6 as the outcome of health care. We can easily extend the importance placed on normalizing and integrating people who are experiencing obstacles such as pain and illness to the context of palliative care, not as its outcome but as a standard. If such a person wishes for a treatment, such as using whatever means required to effectively harvest their organs for donation after brain-death, or the cessation of any further treatments except for pain management, we can see no obstacle to justifying entitlement to the resources that each trajectory requires. Where we run into complications is with Rawls’s equality scheme. Rawls often expresses the importance of disregard for social background to ensure equality, but requires the grouping of people into like levels of talents and skills, and having people grouped together with those of a similar level of willingness to participate in the pursuit of opportunity: “In all sectors of society there should be roughly equal prospects of…achievement for everyone similarly motivated and endowed.”7 Do we consider the talents and skills of the dying person fully participating in palliative decision-making? We could. If we see intelligence as predisposed and not acquired, according to the Rawlsian scheme we would have to group people of similar intelligence together when determining distribution entitlements. These different levels of intelligence could possibly have varying degrees of effective decision-making capabilities. Does this mean that these groups have different entitlements? Are groups having greater intelligence and more effective decision-making abilities more entitled? This seems unconscionable. What about other skills and talents that can be utilized by the competent and communicative dying person? We can see how it may be useful to have endurance, calmness, and empathy (for their loved ones who are suffering from anticipatory grief, perhaps). The idea of a dying person supporting their family might seem odd given their own suffering, but is a phenomenon which often occurs, as expressed by the disabled anthropologist Robert Murphy in his auto-ethnography “The Body Silent.”8 Murphy indicates that families and health care staff have expectations of the patient, such as keeping a happy front, not complaining and being compliant to treatment. When we consider endurance or calmness, we can see that these qualities may help the individual. When we consider compliance or non-complaining, such qualities may compromise autonomy. Should there be a difference in entitlements between groups of dying individuals who have varying degrees of positive inner qualities such as endurance or lack of anxiety? Looking at talents and skills this way, it is hard to see how having certain endowments can help determine entitlement to palliative resources. How about willingness, then? All else being equal, if we have two dying people and one is willing to participate in autonomous palliative decision-making and the other is not, do they have different entitlements? Certainly we cannot force anyone to assert and claim their opportunity to be an autonomous agent. We cannot threaten to withhold resources as a means of bullying an individual into making decisions. We can, however, inform the dying person that if they do not make a decision, a decision will have to be made on their behalf and it may not be in accord with their wishes. Degrees of willingness, also, does not seem to be a strong method of determining distribution. Rather than focusing on varying degrees between dying individuals, with Rawls’s statement that those with “similar abilities and skills should have similar life chances”9 we can go so far as to group those needing palliative care together, as a group containing those who have similar circumstances and who thus are in need of similar resource entitlements.

For the incompetent or uncommunicative dying individual, participation in decision-making is obstructed. With clear and extensive advance directives, autonomy and full participation in decision-making by the individual is ensured, despite their natural withdrawal from normal social interaction. Using Daniels’s framework, we could justify resource entitlements that would result from such decisions based on the individual’s continued participation over the course of a lifetime, albeit passive and without the remainder of normal-species functioning. Rawls might point to such a person’s skill in having the foresight to set up such personal advance directives, and their willingness to participate in the opportunity of affirming their autonomy even when not able to do so actively. Without such directives we normally turn to decision by proxy. This is a very complicated area of palliative ethics, one in which I see much folly and neglect in practice and, thus, demanding resources for further research. I myself am committed to such a pursuit. Who is the proxy decision-maker? Although meaning alternate or substitute, it is interesting that ‘proxy’ and ‘proximate’ appear to have the same etymological origin, and in practice we do look first to closeness of kin for a proxy. Closeness of kin can be difficult to ascertain because it might not be biological. It also can be confused with locational proximity of kin versus kin with closeness of ties, such as in the case of closely tied kin being abroad and more distantly tied kin being at hand. Nevertheless, we can assume that closeness of kin is esteemed, but not how this closeness is determined. Is it based on the family hierarchy? In establishing the original position, an ideal theoretical paradigm to serve as the basis for a theory of justice, Rawls states that“…we may think of the parties as heads of families, and therefore as having a desire to further the welfare of their nearest descendents.”10 Is the family head the best proxy decision-maker? Even if we determine a valid proxy, there can also be difficulties in maintaining the autonomy of the dying individual because the proxy might have very different ideas regarding possible courses of action. They may even say that what they think is aligned with what the dying person wishes, even if it is not the case. Without intending harm, the proxy may truly think that they know what the dying person wants and be mistaken. Without directives, or in the case of there being no other family members to consult, there is no way to check such assertions. The palliative care team can either take the word of the proxy, or take the proxy’s position as suspect and combine it with, or compare it to, the logic of the harms and benefits of different courses of action from the team’s multidisciplinary perspective. I don’t see how the fair equality of opportunity principle accounts for resource distribution entitlements in such circumstances, where there is no normal species functioning of the individual at all, except to appeal again to their dependency on kin and/or the health care team naturally demanding resource entitlements. It is hard to not see the importance of using whatever means to ensure an effective process of decision-making on behalf of the dying individual if we have esteem for the principles of autonomy and non-malevolence.

Is palliative care a valid subcategory of health care?

I have one last attack on the fair equality of opportunity principle as a way to justify palliative care resource entitlements. As a subcategory of health care in general, it could be argued that it is redundant to treat palliative care as a special case if health care is already treated as “special and should be treated differently from other social goods.”11 Here it is useful, then, to show that, according to the justice theory used by Rawls and Daniels, palliative care does not qualify as a subcategory of health care at all. We can say that dying is within the “normal opportunity range”12 because it is a normal part of every human life in bringing about it its conclusion. Naturally, Daniels sees that “health care needs increase later in life…”13 and we know intuitively that they culminate at death. Yet Rawls and Daniels both see the basic function of health care identically. Rawls sees health care as "treatment that restores persons to good health, enabling them to resume their normal lives as cooperating members of society."14 Daniels also sees health care serving to “maintain, restore…normal species functioning. ”15 To return the human to normal species functioning is not the purpose of palliative care. If the fair equality of opportunity principle is able to provide justification for health care entitlements, and the purpose of health care is not the same as that for palliative care, then this is yet another reason to reject this particular principle of justice as a basis for justifying palliative care entitlements. I concur with Daniels that there are many functions of health care16 and extend that statement to palliative care. However, it is often cited that the main function of palliative care is to provide comfort.17 Daniels holds that, of the many functions of health care, that of “reducing pain and suffering is not a general enough function to explain the importance of health care.”18 I hold that, for palliative care, it is.

Endnotes

1. Daniels, Norman; Just Health Care
Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1985.
p.20
2. Ibid. p.52
3. Rawls, John; A Theory of Justice
Cambridge, Mass. : Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, c1971.
p.72
4. Ibid. p.73
5. Martin, Rex; Reidy, David A. (Editors); Rawls’s Law of Peoples: A Realistic Utopia?; Malden, MA; Blackwell Publishing, 2006.
pp.14-15
6. Rawls, John; Political Liberalism
New York, Columbia University Press, 1993.
p.184
7. Rawls 1971: p.73
8. Murphy, Robert F.; The Body Silent New York: Henry Holt, 1987.
9. Rawls 1971: p.63
10. Ibid. p.28
11. Daniels, 1985: p.19
12. Ibid. p.33
13. Ibid. p.52
14. Rawls, John; Kelly, Erin (Editor); Justice as Fairness : A Restatement
Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2001.
p. 174
15. Daniels 1985: p.32
16. Daniels 1985: p.49
17. Hickey, Joanne V.; The Clinical Practice of Neurological and Neurosurgical Nursing; Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2009.
p. 28
18. Daniels 1985: p.49

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Caring for the Dying Buddhist, and the Buddhist Caring for the Dying


Caring for the Dying Buddhist,
and the Buddhist Caring for the Dying

by Sean Hillman
Religion Department
University of Toronto
April 2008

Introduction

Humans have always died. Many religious systems hold the view that the human life-span has been degenerating through the ages. The Hebrew texts assign the earliest patriarchs with life spans over 900 years, and amazingly show an exponential decay curve after the flood leading to an equilibrium of seventy years of age after 20 generations. ^1 Both Hinduism and Buddhism refer to our current age as a degenerate one. The "Kali Yuga" is the final phase before the world system ends. In this age, morality has hit a low point and results in shorter life spans. In Buddhist cosmology, lifetimes are shorter in comparison to those during more pure ages, times very long ago (such as those during previous Buddhas) and also during times not as long ago (during the time of our current historical Buddha Shakyamuni and thereabouts). For example, "in the age when [the] human lifespan was 20,000 years, [Lord Buddha] had been a Brahmin disciple of the [previous] Buddha Kasyapa"^2 and five hundred years after Shakyamuni Buddha, the great scholar-saint Arya Nagarjuna is said in some sources to have lived for 700 years. From the earliest time in Buddhist history, Buddhist practice and teachings have spent a great deal of time addressing impermanence and death. "In the present aeon-ending Kali-yug, [Lord Buddha] saw that by the time human lifespan has decreased to less that one hundred years, and people are increasingly tormented by poverty and strife, they are better prepared to grasp the truths of impermanence and dependent arising, and more receptive to the teachings of spiritual liberation."^2 The above excerpt shows that recognizing the reality of impermanence is a necessary component in the process of becoming liberated. In cyclic existence, the most visceral experience of impermanence is death. The Buddha told His cousin and attendant Arya Ananda that a Buddha can live for an indefinite period of time, and yet He still manifested the appearance of passing away. The texts often point to this as one of the twelve particularly crucial deeds the Buddha performed for our benefit. If a fully realised being such as the Buddha passes away, how can we unenlightened hope to escape this? Although death and dying is a constant throughout the ages, what is perhaps unique to our current time is the phenomenon of Buddhists being cared for by non-Buddhists. We have the existence of different types of institutions and organisations that provide end-of-life care: free-standing hospices, hospice outreach programmes where care is provided in the dying person's own home, nursing and retirement homes, long-term care facilities, hospitals and so on. As well, we find growing numbers of examples of Buddhists caring for non-Buddhists at death-time. These two phenomena, non-Buddhists caring for dying Buddhists and Buddhists caring for the dying, lead to two specific and important areas of Buddhist social engagement: 1) educating palliative caregivers who have Buddhist clients about the unique needs of Buddhists at death time, and 2) Buddhists actively caring for the dying as a practice. The latter often includes not only front-line, hands-on palliative care delivery, but also the activities involved in building resources to increase and ensure equal opportunity access to palliative care for those who need it.

To put end-of-life care into a Buddhist context, first we will first look at the Buddhist philosophical understanding of death. Next, although there is often cultural variety in how Buddhists deal with death, teasing out some common Buddhist practices at death will demonstrate the sensitivities needed by non-Buddhists who care for Buddhists in multifaith care-delivery environments. Finally, the attitude and inner exercises used in a Buddhist approach to caregiving will show the practical application of Buddhist mental training in the context of palliative care usually kept private within the mind of a practitioner. These three explorations, hopefully, will not only give a glimpse into the world of palliative care given to, and given by, Buddhists, but also be useful in general to anyone concerned with preparing for their own death and helpful to anyone who cares for the dying and bereaved.

Buddhist philosophical understanding of death

The Buddhist view of death actually begins with birth. When a being is born, they begin to move towards death and, inevitably, move progressively through the experiences of the four sufferings of birth, sickness, old age and death. The Four Arya Truths, the main summary of the Buddha's teachings and the content of His first public lecture, establishes the reality of suffering as the starting point for entering into the Buddhist path. This First Noble Truth is not a morbid dwelling on suffering but is presented in conjunction with the other three: that there is a cause to this suffering, there is an end to this suffering and there is a cause to the end of this suffering. Seeing all four components of this paradigm instills hope that there is true relief, and motivates the spiritual aspirant to seek this freedom and to stop creating the causes of pain. The ultimate goal of practising Buddhism is freedom from suffering, and much more. The definition of a Buddha, a fully enlightened being, is a being free of all mental and physical suffering who is both omniscient, able to directly perceive all objects of knowledge, and possesses infinite compassion: the wish to remove all of the suffering of all beings. It is no accident that freedom from suffering and omniscience abide together in the mind of a Buddha. All sufferings come from ignorance. Generally, ignorance is a wrong understanding of reality which sees things as existing inherently and independently when in fact they exist interdependently. This root ignorance (a delusion itself) breeds more delusions which in turn bring about all wrong actions of body, speech and mind and result in suffering. Conversely, removing this ignorance ends the chain of cause and effect just mentioned: no ignorance means no delusions and the wrong actions they cause, and thus no suffering result. When applied to the actions of sentient beings, this chain of cause and effect is what is referred to as karma (Skt: “action”) and its manipulation is required for improving the quality of life. The logic of karma is that all happiness comes from virtuous actions of body, speech and mind, and all misery from non-virtuous actions from these same "three doors." From the Buddhist perspective, karma is totally changeable. That we can change our future by what we do now, and purify every negativity imprinted on our mind from past misdeeds, induces hope. It is the reasoning which shores up the view that each of us has the potential to become free from all suffering. It is of crucial importance to note that sufferings, including death, are not seen in Buddhist thought as a "punishment." Karma is not controlled by any one, human or divine, but rather our experiences are the mere ripening of past actions. Considering the seemingly cold and calculating nature of the natural law of karma, one may see a reasonable basis for feeling that oneself or others "deserve" what they are getting. To be sure, the etymological root of the word "deserve," from the Latin deservire meaning "to be worthy of," supports this.^3 However, the saying "they will get what they deserve" in modern colloquial usage, although in essence reinforces the reality and efficacy of cause and effect, usually has a negative connotation. It implies that the agent will suffer and, therefore, does not accurately represent the “like cause, like effect” aspect of karma. The agent also deserves happiness as a result of past positive actions! To defeat another modern misunderstanding, instant karma is generally nonexistent, despite the wonderful song by John Lennon. Although extremely positive and negative deeds can have ripening results immediately, such as those actions directed towards powerful objects (enlightened beings or one's parents), for the most part, actions ripen long after the fact, often many lifetimes later. The "why me?" syndrome comes from the fact that beings may not be able to trace what ripens now to a cause in this life. Despite this, through logic, we do have a natural sense of the cause. It makes good sense that poverty is a result of greed, separation from loved ones is the result of causing others to separate, and so on.

Death is the transition time where the mind leaves the body and moves onto the next life and must be seen in the context of karma and rebirth. The scriptures subdivide death into various types, as shown in Buddhaghosa's "Visuddhi Magga" (Pali: “Path of Purification”) where this prolific 5th Century Indian Buddhist commentator distinguishes between timely and untimely death:
"Timely death comes about with the exhaustion of merit, with the exhaustion of life potential (ayu), or with both. Untimely death comes about through kamma that interrupts [other, life-producing] kamma.
"Death through exhaustion of merit, here, refers to the death that comes about entirely through the finished ripening of [former] rebirth-producing kamma even when favourable conditions for prolonging the continuity of the life-potential may still be present. Death through exhaustion of life potential refers to the death that comes about through the exhaustion of the natural life potential of human beings, which amounts to only 100 years…
"Untimely death refers to the death of those whose continuity is interrupted by kamma capable of causing them to fall from their place [on a particular level of being] at that very moment…or for the death of those whose continuity is interrupted by attacks with weapons etc., due to previous kamma. All these are included under the [term] interruption of life faculty."^4

In addition to the division of death into types, the process of death itself is divided into stages which are determined by the sequential dissolution of the elements. As illustrated by the chart below, each elemental dissolution affects particular bodily functions, are accompanied by external signs and symptoms and internal visions that the dying person experiences. This happens long before clinical death and can a very useful measuring tool. For example, at the dissolution of the earth element, even if the dying person is safely supported by caregivers and bed-rails, they still have the experience of falling.
The importance of death in Buddhist practice is shown in the story of the Buddha Himself, an Indian Prince who lived 2500 years ago and who was inspired to entirely dedicate his life to becoming fully developed for the sake of others after seeing four sights: an old person, a corpse, a sick person, and a mendicant. Like for Prince Siddhartha, exposure to and contemplation of death prompts an urgent motivation for practising spiritual methods diligently and without delay. A practitioner ideally will prepare for death by contemplating it as often as possible because it is the most crucial time in one's life, since (due to karma), the last moment of one's mind in one life will determine what type of experience and existence one will have next. The inevitability of death is the great equaliser. Whether beautiful or ugly, poor or rich, all must die. It is even possible to see death as the ultimate challenge, showing how well one has prepared. Rather than a solemn and mournful event, with a worn-out body naturally comes the time to trade in the old ride for some new wheels. Normally we don’t wear old clothes because they no longer protect our body. Likewise, a broken body is no longer an effective basis for the mind. It must have a new support. This process of leaving the body is also an opportunity to practice. It is a means of purification since any suffering we have, as the experienced result of a former misdeed, is the burning off of some of our accumulated bad karma. Death is one of five events (along with sleeping, yawning, sneezing, and sexual orgasm) experienced by ordinary sentient beings where they naturally, without training, catch a glimpse of the Clear Light nature of mind. As such, the stages of dissolution at death, which are accompanied by changing states of consciousness including the arousal of the Clear Light Mind, are utilised by the Tantric meditator to develop accomplishments on the path to enlightenment. Such practices can be done long before death as well, as a practice in and of itself as well as a preparation for impending death.
"Buddhist tantra...is aimed at stopping death...and transforming [it] into Buddhahood. This is done through a series of yogas that are modelled on the process of death...until the yogi gains such control over them that he or she is no longer subject to dying. Since these yogas are based on simulating death, it is important for the yogi to know how humans die-the stages of death and the physiological reasons behind them."^6
Death is a vital time where the difference between an ordinary person, a practitioner and a realised being is displayed. An ordinary person might enter into death out of awareness and terrified, however the practitioner at the very least has the conscious wish to not have this experience. The consciousness of both the practitioner and non-practitioner will linger in the body out of attachment. A high being, one who has achieved realisations of a certain level, will not only meditate at the time of death but also have the ability to consciously leave the body, as well as wilfully direct their rebirth. They also will linger in the body, but not out of attachment. This lingering of the mind in the body shows a distinguishing characteristic of the Buddhist exposition of death in relation to modern medicine. Clinical death is generally defined as vital signs being absent and, with the exception of determining brain-function for those on life-support, is the only thing required for a physician to note when pronouncing death. In the Buddhist exegesis the mind does not necessarily leave when vital signs are absent. Clinical death, although a sign of a particular phase in the process of death, is not actually death. The Tantric texts explain that when the mind leaves the body, actual death, a drop of blood comes from the nose and a drop of semen (for males) is emitted from the penis. Displaying the simple beauty of nature, these vital fluids coming together at conception coincide with the entrance of the consciousness into the womb, and their appearance at death indicates its departure.

Common Buddhist Practices at death

It is important to emphasize that what is taught by the Buddha and what is understood, or even accepted, by a Buddhist don't always match. Buddhism, as a practise of mental and emotional development that is based on logical reasoning and not a system of tenets, is a religion that promotes questioning and healthy skepticism. The Buddha encouraged His students to check out the teachings "as a metal-worker burns gold to remove impurities." In Buddhism, we find not a system of belief, but rather methods that bring about ever-increasing mental and emotional stages leading toward the direct realisations of reality and compassion. Everyone has the freedom to practise as they wish, so the ways that people’s personal practices manifest are quite diverse. Suffice to say, the overriding theme with death practices is to ensure a peaceful and virtuous state of mind for both the dying and everyone around them, including spiritual and health caregivers and the bereaved.
There are some religious practices that are applied, or encouraged, in all cultural forms of Buddhism and some that are done only in some traditions. Starting with those that are common to both the Southern and Northern schools of Buddhism, many practices at death are mental exercises and some of these, in spirit, are common to other faiths as well. Generating virtuous states of mind such as love and compassion can come from analytical contemplation or even the mere remembrance of such qualities and those who embody them. Purification practices can be performed inwardly as well with such practices as the Four Opponent Powers during which one engages in recognizing past mistakes, feels remorse, resolves to discontinue harm and applies a virtuous counter-action. The Northern school often uses visualisation and mantra recitation (Skt: “mind protection” in the form of mnemonic formulas) to purify as well. As it was for the Buddha, for any practitioner, one's own or other's illness can be used as an opportunity to generate empathy. Feeling such things as "may no one suffer like this," or “may I experience this suffering on their behalf” are powerful means to both strengthen concern for others and generate merit. The First Panchen Lama verbalised such feelings of exchange in his Guru Puja text (Skt: “Offering to the Religious Master”):
"As no one desires even the slightest suffering nor ever has enough of happiness, there is no difference between myself and theirs; therefore, inspire me to rejoice when others are happy.
"Cherishing myself is the doorway to all downfalls, while cherishing my mothers is the foundation for everything good; inspire me to make the core of my practise the yoga of exchanging self for others.
"Therefore, O Venerable Compassionate Gurus, Bless me that all karmic obscurations and sufferings of mother migrators ripen on me right now, and that I may give others my happiness and virtuous deeds in order that all sentient beings have happiness." ^8
As in the merit generated by developing empathetic concern, merit can be generated internally by any virtuous mental practice. Concentration (Skt: Shamata), analytical (Skt: Vipassana) and visualisation meditation are practices found in most Buddhist contexts. The Seven Limb practice, although some of which is Mahayana specific, contains elements that are found in most traditions and can be recited inwardly or outwardly. It includes taking refuge in the Three Jewels of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha, making offerings, confessing past mistakes, rejoicing at one’s own and other’s virtues, requesting Dharma teachings, requesting the religious teacher to remain and dedicating the merit for the benefit of all beings. Making offerings can be done mentally but is a very strong external practice in every Buddhist community. Offering can be seen in every environment, from temple to the hospice, and can go from being as elaborate as offering up pleasing objects for each of the five senses, to being as simple as arranging some flowers and fruit. The same goes for virtuous verbal recitation and chanting. Almost every Buddhist will engage in, and resonate with, some form of recitation of scripture, prayers and mantras. Most religions will have some form of virtuous verbalisation before, during and after the death of a member, but in Buddhism it is of crucial importance for helping the mind of the dying person. It is held in Tantric texts that the last sense faculty to cease to function is that of hearing. When the mind leaves the body, the in-between state (Tib: Bar-do) is also described as one where the being has a subtle body that has the same faculties as in life, and thus can also hear. For these reasons, recitations are used to both trigger virtuous states of mind in the transmigrating being, as well as to guide them through the stages of transmigration, both in aid of a smooth transition. The famous “Tibetan Book of the Dead,” written by the Indian pandit Guru Padmasambhava, is used in the Tibetan tradition to navigate the bardo being through the tumultuous experience of being in between bodies. The Tibetan tradition has appropriated some other practices from the Indian tradition as well, well-suited to the time of death. Transmitted secretly, Phowa (Tib: “transference of consciousness”) is a very popular Tantric visualisation exercise involving both the red Buddha of longevity Amitabha as well as a wrathful, red female Buddha in the form of a yogini, or female tantrika. One projects one’s consciousness out of the crown with the purpose of going to Buddha Amitabha’s Pure Land, which is a refined plane of existence where becoming enlightened is the main activity. This practice, like all death practices, can be done at any time and is not reserved for the time of death. A common theme in Buddhist practice, it is something to be mastered in life in anticipation for death. Growing out of the tradition of mentally exchanging oneself for others, found in the Indian texts of both Arya Nagarjuna and Arya Shantideva, Tonglen (Tib: “giving and taking”) is aimed at transforming one's own and other's suffering. Visualising other people’s problems as black smoke, one takes it into one’s heart where it becomes light that, in turn, radiates out to the afflicted. They are then imagined to be free of all problems. One might wonder how, and for what purpose, a person who is afflicted themselves would imagine taking on more suffering. The suffering is not absorbed, but rather is transformed, and the overwhelming emotional event that occurs is the arising of exceptionally strong compassion. It is safe to say that this practice in general, and at death-time in particular, is one that is held in the highest of esteem in the Tibetan tradition because of its ability to make remarkable mental changes with a very simple method. Lastly is another practice that, although having some precedence in the Southern schools, manifests uniquely and with great fervour in the Tibetan and the Indian tradition that it arose from. Life-extension practices, often tantric and very often involving longevity deities such as the tantric aspect of Amitabha known as “Amitayus,” are used both to ward off untimely deaths caused by interference from other karma that would interrupt life, and also to ward off death caused by the exhaustion of life-enhancing merit by generating more of such. One very simple life-extension practice is in the saving and caring for other beings, such as in releasing bait to save their lives or caring for the sick and dying, because the karmic ripening result of such practices is long life.
Despite Buddhism being a non-theistic religion, one which is based on self-development and personal responsibility, often times a Buddhist will call on the Buddha for assistance, despite the Buddha Himself saying that "a Buddha cannot remove suffering like rain washes away dirt; only one's own effort can remove suffering." Although the result will not be the removal of suffering of one by another, such a plea at least directs the mind towards the Buddha and is therefore necessarily, from the Buddhist perspective, virtuous. It is even said that feeling anger towards the Buddha is still virtuous because of the limitless beneficial power of the Awakened One.

A Buddhist Approach to Caregiving

In general, caregiving emanates from our natural predisposition to care for one another. Because of this, all traditions, both cultural and religious, have developed methods over time to address the problem of illness and death. Some of the activities of a Buddhist who engages in caregiving as a part of their practice will be similar, if not identical, to those found elsewhere. That being said, there are some strong themes found in Buddhist caregiving that of course grow out of Buddhist practise and philosophy in general, and Buddhist death-practices in particular. Unlike the Christian monastic tradition of nursing, Buddhist monastic caregiving has historically been reserved for monks caring only for fellow monks. This comes from the admonition in the monastic discipline texts (Skt: Vinaya) against monks nursing, or providing medical treatment for, householders. Perhaps due to the overriding influence of the Bodhisattva texts and vows in the Northern schools of Buddhism, which place a greater emphasis on helping others as much as one is able, there is a new historical precedent of Tibetan monks becoming doctors and Western monastics in the Tibetan tradition engaging in caregiving in every possible way, to people of every background, including non-Buddhist householders who are dying. There may be a greater accessibility for Buddhist caregivers to deliver care to non-Buddhists, especially in the area of hospice, because of a lack in very strong family and religious community organisational infrastructure found in traditional Buddhist communities. Another possibility is that the statistically high number of Tibetan Buddhists engaging in hospice and caregiving with the sick might be the result of the Tibetan community being one that is oppressed within their borders, and composed of struggling refugees outside. Thus lacking the cohesive individual and systemic infrastructure found in more stable Buddhist communities, there is a greater need for, and more opportunity to, help.
Musings aside, as with the common Buddhist practices mentioned earlier, there are some aspects to Buddhist caregiving that are shared by every tradition, and some specific to the Northern school. As a practicing Buddhist, the Buddhist caregiver will be engaging in personal, inner development in some capacity. They will already have within their mind a habit of developing, feeling and expressing love and compassion to some degree. However small, they have some sense of wanting the recipient of their care to be happy and free from suffering. They will also have spent some amount of time contemplating death and impermanence, and thus will have done some preparation for their own death. Working on one’s own feelings about death will naturally help others approach it more realistically and with less fear if they are at all influenced by the caregiver. The Buddhist caregiver has at least heard about the inevitability and unpredictability of death, if they haven’t realised it yet, and they may even see themselves reflected in the dying person. They may even go farther and, through analysis, come to realise that since they themselves must definitely die, there is essentially no difference between the dying person and themselves. This is a simple form of selflessness. Another common practice will be seen across the tradition, and that is equanimity. The caregiver who is familiarised with equalising their feelings towards those close to them, those distant or against and those of neutral status, will have an easier time having affection for the dying person they are caring for. If the Buddhist caregiver takes the advice of the Buddha to develop a concern for others as a mother does for their only child, one can imagine the potential for very deep concern being generated in the caregiver’s mind.

The Buddhist caregiver from a Northern tradition, or rather with a Bodhisattva intention, will have some unique aspects to their caregiving approach. For starters, although there are many examples in the Southern tradition of usage of the logic of infinitely regressing rebirths to prove the connection each being has with all other beings, it is highly emphasised in the Northern schools. So much so that texts, such as the Guru Puja quoted earlier, refer to sentient beings as “mother beings.” Seeing the dying person as related to oneself is a very powerful way to provide care that is both genuine and powerfully beneficial. What is perhaps more difficult is seeing every recipient of care as loveable! Here, logic again comes in handy for the practitioner-caregiver. Since every being has been loved by at least one person, their mother, they must necessarily have some loveable characteristics. With difficult and resistant people, to find these traits is the challenge of the Buddhists caregiver. In such a case, there are a few very powerful means that come from the Northern tradition of mind-transformation (Tib: Lo-jong). The first is the life-altering practice of seeing problems and negativity as useful tools to develop our own inner qualities. With this approach, no matter what is happening in the environment, or even within one’s own mind, one can see it as an opportunity to train the mind. This means that the more difficult the situation or person is, the greater the potential to develop good qualities! This has very far-reaching implications and completely destroys the idea that one needs to remove oneself from problematic circumstances in order to be happy. The practice of taking problems onto the path is peerlessly summarised in these lines from the Eight Verses for Training the Mind by the Tibetan scholar-monk Geshe Langri Thangpa, which state:
“I will learn to cherish beings of bad nature and those oppressed by strong negativity and suffering as if I had found a precious treasure very difficult to find.”9 Another Lojong technique is to not expect appreciation, sometimes referred to as “giving up all hope of reward.” This, along with the former practice, is not to encourage others to be disrespectful towards their caregivers. Instead, it places the caregiver in a strong mental position where the mind can remain content and happy regardless of how the caregiver is treated. Otherwise, the caregiver’s emotional state is moved according to the whims of the dying person, which means that their locus of control is without rather than within. As is commonly said about the difference between practicing in isolation versus in the marketplace, it is easy to not get angry on the mountaintop while locked away in retreat. It is very difficult to not get angry when confronted with other beings, and being able to maintain one’s integrity when in relation with others is the greatest testament as to the strength of one’s training.

Conclusion

We live at a time, and in a place, where caring institutions must engage in multi-faith care delivery. People of every type of background need care at the time of death, and likewise, those who provide such care are equally diverse. In keeping with this shift, Buddhists are receiving care outside of the traditional circle of their familial and religious community, from both Buddhists and non-Buddhists, and Buddhists are taking care of people of every possible background. Everyone is coming into contact with views and practices that are different from, and unfamiliar to, their own. Although there are more similarities than differences between the various cultural and religious traditions, such as the common effort to become better humans who are more loving and who develop an ever-increasing understanding of how things work, it nevertheless remains important not to negate fundamental differences. These do not need to be a bone of contention but can instead be a happy source of variety. It is good to recognise and accept these differences, but it is possible to even go as far as to enjoy these differences and learn from one another. In the field of caring for the dying, what is crucial is providing the best possible care, equitably, to all who need it. In general what is most important is not the manner in which this care is given, but rather ensuring that there is the deep wish for the highest benefit for the dying person, and those connected to them. In the words of Geshe Langri Tangpa: “With a determination to accomplish the highest welfare for all sentient beings, who surpass even a wish-granting jewel, I will learn to hold them supremely dear.” 9 This will beatify all caregiving activities and will especially help during difficult times.


References

1. Mendez, Sr., Arnold C. WHY did people live longer BEFORE Noah's Flood than they did after it?
Bible Study Web Site

2. Akester, Mathew; Twelve Principle Deeds of Lord Buddha, Nagarjuna Institute, 2006

3. Harper, Douglas; Online Etymological Dictionary 2001

4. Buddhaghosa; The path of purification : Visuddhimagga; Shambhala Publications, 1976

5. Marilyn Smith-Stoner, RN, PhD, CHPN Phowa: End-of-Life Ritual Prayers for Tibetan Buddhists, Journal of Hospice and Palliative Nursing, Vol. 8, No. 6, Nov/Dec/ 2006

6. Lati Rinbochay and Hopkins, Jeffrey. Death, Intermediate State and Rebirth
in Tibetan Buddhism. Ithaca: Snow Lion, 1979

7. Tricycle Buddhist Review Fall 1997

8. Chokyi Gyaltsen, Panchen Losang; Guru Puja (Lama Choepa), Library of Tibetan Works and Archives 1979

9. Sonam Rinchen, Geshe; Eight Verses for Training the Mind Snow Lion Publications; 2006

By the merit of this research paper, and the accumulated virtue of the three times and ten directions, may all beings have boundless happiness, and especially for those who suffer from illness and the process of death and those that care for them, may they be free from all pain and may all be auspicious.

Sarva Mangalam