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As His Wife鈥檚 Caregiver, A Doctor Discovers What鈥檚 Missing At Health Care's Core

Caring for someone with a serious illness stretches people spiritually and emotionally, often beyond what they might have thought possible.

Dr. Arthur Kleinman, a professor of psychiatry and anthropology at Harvard University, calls this 鈥渆nduring the unendurable鈥 in his recently published book, 鈥淭he Soul of Care: The Moral Education of a Husband and a Doctor.鈥

The book describes Kleinman鈥檚 awakening to the realities of caregiving when his beloved wife, Joan, was diagnosed with a rare form of early Alzheimer鈥檚 disease that causes blindness as well as cognitive deterioration.

Although Kleinman鈥檚 specialty is studying how patients experience illness, he wasn鈥檛 prepared for the roller coaster of family caregiving. Each time he adapted to Joan鈥檚 changing condition, another setback would occur, setting off new crises and fueling uncertainty and stress.

During 11 years of caregiving until Joan鈥檚 death in 2011, Kleinman learned that no one who goes through this emerges unchanged. He became less self-centered, more compassionate and more aware of how the health care system fails to support family caregivers 鈥 the backbone of the nation鈥檚 long-term care system.

I spoke with Kleinman in mid-November at a . His remarks below are edited for length and clarity.

About his book. 鈥淚 wrote it for a specific reason. I had spent my whole career as an expert on care. I myself was a psychiatrist who worked with patients with chronic medical disorders, [such as] chronic pain, diabetes, heart disease, cancer. I thought I knew it all. A veil of ignorance was raised from my eyes by my experience as a primary family caregiver.

鈥淲hat is that veil of ignorance about? It鈥檚 about recognizing just how difficult family care is for [people with] dementia and, not just dementia, but many other problems.鈥

Daily responsibilities. 鈥淟et鈥檚 say in the fifth year, what was it like? I would get Joan up around 6 a.m. and take her to the bathroom. I have to handle the toilet paper, wash her hands, dress her to work out, take her to the bath and bathe her.

鈥淚 would shampoo her hair, dry her, pick out her clothes [for the day]. After that, I would prepare breakfast. As she got increasingly agitated, [that] became difficult because I had to sometimes hold her hands [to] keep her from throwing things or getting up and hurting herself. Because she was blind, she couldn鈥檛 see where she was. And then I would help her eat 鈥 usually, at the end, feeding her 鈥 and then take her to a room where we would sit and listen quietly to music.

鈥淢aybe six, seven years into this, I would just sit there and hold her hands. And even that became difficult. So, I would tell her stories of the past 鈥 our stories. [Editorial note: This is just the beginning of a day full of similar tasks.]

鈥淚 discovered early on that the ritualization of acts of caring 鈥 the dressing, bathing, all these things 鈥 is a way of habit formation that keeps you going.鈥

Challenging masculinity. 鈥淲e had a great relationship, but it was asymmetrical. For 36 years, my wife took care of me. I was raised as a classical male in the 1940s. When I showed an interest in cooking, my grandmother said to me, 鈥榃hat are you, a sissy?鈥 I was a tough kid on New York [City] streets. I had the most unpromising beginnings to be a caregiver. And my wife slowly socialized me to a different kind of masculinity, to be able to care.

鈥淸Pay family members for caregiving] and you鈥檒l see more men do it. Go to Australia, for example, where there鈥檚 very good compensation for care, and you鈥檙e astonished at the number of men who are caring for children, who are caring for elderly, and the like."

Asking for help. 鈥淚 have a wide circle of friends and colleagues, and [after the book] many of them said they had never realized what was involved. Part of that was my fault. I had a lot of trouble asking for help. Actually, at one point, I so exhausted myself that my kids, who are great, said, 鈥榊ou really need assistance.鈥 And they stepped in, as did my mother. My mother, who at the time was in her 90s.

鈥淪o, I had a great system of care around me, but I [also] needed a home health aide to [help with Joan and] keep myself going. I found an Irish woman 鈥 and she was fabulous.鈥

Maintaining presence. 鈥淚n spite of that, I found it extraordinarily difficult in terms of other elements of care, one of which is presence. To keep your liveliness, your love, the presence of who you are going while you鈥檙e doing all this work of caregiving 鈥 it is extremely difficult and demanding, but it鈥檚 crucial.

鈥淲hen people ask 鈥榃hy do you do [this]?鈥 the answer of most family caregivers I鈥檝e spoken to is 鈥榃ell, it was there to do. It鈥檚 got to be done, [so] you do it.鈥欌

Learning about failure. 鈥淚 was fortunate in life; I had a golden career. I have a personality that is like a bulldog, and when I start something I finish it. But there鈥檚 no finishing care. Every one of us [family caregivers], if we鈥檙e honest, you fail at a certain point. The frustrations build, anger mounts, you control your anger so you don鈥檛 injure the person you鈥檙e caring for. But you鈥檝e got to somehow handle it inside you.鈥

The soul of care. 鈥淚 think what lies at the soul of care is a form of love. You will do everything you can for another because they mean so much to you. [But] it is also problematic, because we all have complex relationships and we鈥檝e got other things going on in our lives.

鈥淲e endure, we learn how to endure, how to keep going. We鈥檙e marked, we鈥檙e injured, we鈥檙e wounded. We鈥檙e changed 鈥 [in] my case, for the better. If you had known me before my 11 years of care, you wouldn鈥檛 recognize me today. I was your classical hard-driving Harvard professor 鈥 as tough as any other professor at Harvard Medical School.

鈥淚鈥檝e redeemed myself through this experience, in a way.鈥

A call for change. 鈥淗ow do we strengthen caregiving? How do we do those things that will make it recognized as important as it is? It鈥檚 going to take a radical rethinking. Our health care system [is focused on] entirely the wrong issues. Economics is not the most central aspect of care; it鈥檚 caregiving.

鈥淒o you know not a single one of the senior neurologists I went to with Joan who wanted to do everything diagnostically made the recommendation 鈥榊ou want to think about a home health aide now, even though you don鈥檛 need it right now. You have to look into how you鈥檙e going to reconfigure your house [for] someone who鈥檚 both blind and with dementia. [Or] a social worker is a great navigator of what the health care system is about. You want to take advantage of that.鈥

鈥淪o, this is where I believe that our whole health care system has got to be rethought, from the bottom up with attention to care at its core.鈥

We鈥檙e eager to hear from readers about questions you鈥檇 like answered, problems you鈥檝e been having with your care and advice you need in dealing with the health care system. Visit to submit your requests or tips.

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