Feature

The secret I’ll take to my grave: Doc reveals


 

An internist will never forget the dark secret his patient revealed during a routine visit – or the grim aftermath.

The patient, who had a progressive, incurable neurological condition, confided that he planned to kill himself. The patient intended to conceal the true manner and make the death look natural.

“[He planned to do it] very carefully at home so no one would know,” said the internist, who remains anonymous. “[He shared] the methods he would use.”

Perhaps more shocking than the patient’s confession was the physician’s response.

“He did not require my help to do what he planned, and I did not try to stop him,” said the internist. “I reported his death as ‘natural causes’ and never told anyone.”

The account comes from a response to Medscape’s 2020 Ethics Report in which physicians were asked about their toughest ethical dilemmas. Many physicians shared secrets and dilemmas that have haunted them for years. An ob.gyn., for instance, wrote about struggling with whether to tell a father that his newborn baby was not his genetic child. The newborn had a blood type that made it impossible for the father to be biologically related to the infant, the anonymous doctor wrote.

“I told the wife who then informed me she had a lover,” the ob.gyn. said. “I never told the husband.”

It’s uncertain whether carrying the burden of such hidden knowledge affected the physicians involved in these cases. However, in general, secrets can weigh heavily on the minds of those who keep them and can contribute to stress, said Malia Mason, PhD, a psychologist and dean of research at Columbia Business School in New York. Holding onto secrets can cause depression and anxiety, research shows. The more often people think about the secret, the greater the impact, according to a recent study coauthored by Dr. Mason.

“Keeping a secret diminishes well-being,” Dr. Mason said. “It makes people feel socially distant. It lowers relationship satisfaction, and it leads people to feel inauthentic. The reason that secrets do this is because people think about them all the time. The more you think about it, the more you see these consequences.”

Feelings that stem from a secret depend on the content. The more immoral a secret is thought to be, the more people feel ashamed, according to a 2021 analysis of thousands of secrets, reported by Michael L. Slepian, PhD, and Alex Koch, PhD. However, secrets more related to a person’s profession are often internalized differently, the study found. The more a secret fell higher on the profession/goal-oriented dimension, the more people felt they had insight into the secret, according to the analysis. For example, having clear thinking about the secret and/or knowing how to handle it.

“The more shame participants felt from their secret, the more they indicated the secret hurt their well-being,” Dr. Slepian and Dr. Koch wrote in the study. “The more insight participants felt they had into their secret, the less they indicated the secret hurt their well-being.”

Suspicious deaths exposed after investigations

The internist’s account of keeping his patient’s suicide a secret raises many questions, such as how the patient masked his manner of death. The internist did not share any more details about the incident.

Suicides are among the most challenging manners of deaths to certify, according to James Gill, MD, a pathologist and president of the National Association of Medical Examiners. Death investigators must demonstrate intent, meaning the individuals caused the injury to intentionally harm themselves. Fewer than half of people who die by suicide leave a note, Dr. Gill said, so investigators can’t rely on the absence or the presence of a note in making their determination.

A decedent who had cancer or a severe neurological disorder presents further challenges, said Dr. Gill, who serves as chief medical examiner for the state of Connecticut.

“These [deaths] may not be unexpected and may not be reported to the medical examiner/coroner,” Dr. Gill said. “If there is no suspicion and the treating doctor is willing to sign the death certificate, the death will not come under the jurisdiction of the medical examiner.”

Dr. Gill recalled a death his colleague once investigated that appeared to be natural but emerged as something else after a deeper look.

A woman with metastatic breast cancer was about to be discharged from a hospital into hospice the next morning. The night before, she had a “going away” party with friends who came to visit her in the hospital. Shortly after the friends left, the woman was found dead. Because of her condition, she could have died at any time, Dr. Gill said, but she also had a history of depression and hospital staff were suspicious. The death was reported to the medical examiner’s office.

Toxicology testing found markedly elevated concentrations of phenytoin and pentobarbital, neither of which were prescribed during her hospital stay. Dr. Gill said it turned out that the woman and her friends worked at a veterinarian’s office, and the medication they used to euthanize dogs was a combination of phenytoin and pentobarbital.

“The death was certified as a homicide because of the direct actions of another, but a reasonable argument could be made for suicide,” Dr. Gill said.

In a similar case reported in the journal Science & Justice, a 64-year-old cardiologist was found lifeless by his wife after he collapsed near the stairs of his home. Next to his body was a bottle of whiskey and two cups, one that appeared to be used for the alcohol and one with a yellowish liquid smelling of honey. The wife reported that her husband always drank whiskey with honey before bed. The death was initially classified as natural, but after vehement protest by the family, a forensic autopsy was performed.

Prior to the autopsy, death investigators learned the decedent, who was a well-known and successful practitioner in his community, had Parkinson’s disease. At times, he could not sign his prescriptions because of the increasing tremor in his hands, according to the case study. Investigators learned the patient’s mother had also suffered from Parkinson’s, and that her son had witnessed her decline.

The autopsy revealed only nonspecific lesions such as acute stasis of the viscera, moderate pulmonary and cerebral edema, and moderate generalized atheromatosis. Histological examinations did not yield any unusual findings.

An analysis of the beverage containers detected pentobarbital in the yellowish syrup residue of the second cup. Testing of the doctor’s peripheral blood revealed the presence of a metabolite of pentobarbital, ethanol, and traces of phenobarbital. In addition, a urine analysis showed the presence of venlafaxine, an antidepressant, as well as the benzophenone of lorazepam, a sedating benzodiazepine, and metoclopramide, an antiemetic.

Lead author C. Brandt-Casadevall, MD, and colleagues wrote that the levels were clearly compatible with a scenario of a pentobarbital overdose with a lethal outcome.

“... It is obvious that the victim attempted to hide his suicide from his family circle,” Dr. Brandt-Casadevall and colleagues wrote. “Thus, we obtained no evidence indicating that he might have spoken at any point of putting an end to his life. There was no written note. The victim did not wait to be alone at home. Instead, he committed his act in a routine situation: his wife was watching television late at night and he was upstairs, presumably going to sleep. Thus, he had one to two hours at his disposal, and he ingested a very fast-acting drug which would make any attempt at reanimation impossible, even after a brief period of time. This may have induced the physician in charge to believe that the cause of death was cardiac origin, a likely hypothesis given the age of the victim.”

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