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I've been a critical care EMT for the past
seven years in Suffolk County, New York.
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I've been a first responder in a number of incidents
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ranging from car accidents to Hurricane Sandy.
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If you are like most people, death might be
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one of your greatest fears.
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Some of us will see it coming.
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Some of us won't.
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There is a little-known documented medical term
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called impending doom.
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It's almost a symptom.
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As a medical provider, I'm trained to respond
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to this symptom like any other,
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so when a patient having a heart attack looks at me
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and says, "I'm going to die today,"
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we are trained to reevaluate the patient's condition.
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Throughout my career, I have responded
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to a number of incidents where the patient
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had minutes left to live
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and there was nothing I could do for them.
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With this, I was faced with a dilemma:
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Do I tell the dying that they are about to face death,
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or do I lie to them to comfort them?
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Early in my career, I faced this dilemma
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by simply lying.
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I was afraid.
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I was afraid if I told them the truth,
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that they would die in terror, in fear,
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just grasping for those last moments of life.
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That all changed with one incident.
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Five years ago, I responded to a motorcycle accident.
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The rider had suffered critical, critical injuries.
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As I assessed him, I realized that there was nothing
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that could be done for him,
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and like so many other cases,
he looked me in the eye
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and asked that question: "Am I going to die?"
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In that moment, I decided to do something different.
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I decided to tell him the truth.
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I decided to tell him that he was going to die
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and that there was nothing I could do for him.
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His reaction shocked me to this day.
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He simply laid back and had a look
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of acceptance on his face.
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He was not met with that terror or fear
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that I thought he would be.
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He simply laid there, and as I looked into his eyes,
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I saw inner peace and acceptance.
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From that moment forward, I decided
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it was not my place to comfort the dying with my lies.
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Having responded to many cases since then
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where patients were in their last moments
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and there was nothing I could do for them,
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in almost every case,
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they have all had the same reaction to the truth,
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of inner peace and acceptance.
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In fact, there are three patterns
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I have observed in all these cases.
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The first pattern always kind of shocked me.
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Regardless of religious belief or cultural background,
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there's a need for forgiveness.
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Whether they call it sin
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or they simply say they have a regret,
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their guilt is universal.
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I had once cared for an elderly gentleman
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who was having a massive heart attack.
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As I prepared myself and my equipment
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for his imminent cardiac arrest,
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I began to tell the patient of his imminent demise.
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He already knew by my tone
of voice and body language.
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As I placed the defibrillator pads on his chest,
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prepping for what was going to happen,
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he looked me in the eye and said,
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"I wish I had spent more time with
my children and grandchildren
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instead of being selfish with my time."
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Faced with imminent death,
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all he wanted was forgiveness.
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The second pattern I observe
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is the need for remembrance.
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Whether it was to be remembered in my thoughts
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or their loved ones', they needed to feel
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that they would be living on.
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There's a need for immortality
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within the hearts and thoughts of their loved ones,
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myself, my crew, or anyone around.
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Countless times, I have had a
patient look me in the eyes
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and say, "Will you remember me?"
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The final pattern I observe
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always touched me the deepest, to the soul.
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The dying need to know that their life had meaning.
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They need to know that they did not waste their life
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on meaningless tasks.
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This came to me very, very early in my career.
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I had responded to a call.
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There was a female in her late 50s
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severely pinned within a vehicle.
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She had been t-boned at a high rate of speed,
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critical, critical condition.
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As the fire department worked
to remove her from the car,
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I climbed in to begin to render care.
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As we talked, she had said to me,
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"There was so much more
I wanted to do with my life."
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She had felt she had not left her mark on this Earth.
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As we talked further, it would turn out
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that she was a mother of two adopted children
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who were both on their way to medical school.
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Because of her, two children
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had a chance they never would have had otherwise
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and would go on to save lives in the medical field
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as medical doctors.
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It would end up taking 45 minutes
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to free her from the vehicle.
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However, she perished prior to freeing her.
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I believed what you saw in the movies:
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when you're in those last moments
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that it's strictly terror, fear.
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I have come to realize,
regardless of the circumstance,
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it's generally met with peace and acceptance,
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that it's the littlest things, the littlest moments,
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the littlest things you brought into the world
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that give you peace in those final moments.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)