Cat plays furry grim reaper at nursing home

Big Dakota

New Member
Messages
11,876
Reaction score
0
sourceAP.gif
Cat plays furry grim reaper at nursing home

Oscar has predicted 25 deaths by curling up next to patient in final hours

070725_deathcat_hmed_2p.hmedium.jpg


Updated: 2:56 p.m. MT July 25, 2007

PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Oscar the cat seems to have an uncanny knack for predicting when nursing home patients are going to die, by curling up next to them during their final hours.

His accuracy, observed in 25 cases, has led the staff to call family members once he has chosen someone. It usually means they have less than four hours to live.

“He doesn’t make too many mistakes. He seems to understand when patients are about to die,” said Dr. David Dosa in an interview. He describes the phenomenon in a poignant essay in Thursday’s issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Many family members take some solace from it. They appreciate the companionship that the cat provides for their dying loved one,” said Dosa, a geriatrician and assistant professor of medicine at Brown University.

The 2-year-old feline was adopted as a kitten and grew up in a third-floor dementia unit at the Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. The facility treats people with Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s disease and other illnesses.

After about six months, the staff noticed Oscar would make his own rounds, just like the doctors and nurses. He’d sniff and observe patients, then sit beside people who would wind up dying in a few hours.

Aloof and businesslike feline
Dosa said Oscar seems to take his work seriously and is generally aloof. “This is not a cat that’s friendly to people,” he said.

Oscar is better at predicting death than the people who work there, said Dr. Joan Teno of Brown University, who treats patients at the nursing home and is an expert on care for the terminally ill.

She was convinced of Oscar’s talent when he made his 13th correct call. While observing one patient, Teno said she noticed the woman wasn’t eating, was breathing with difficulty and that her legs had a bluish tinge, signs that often mean death is near.

Oscar wouldn’t stay inside the room though, so Teno thought his streak was broken. Instead, it turned out the doctor’s prediction was roughly 10 hours too early. Sure enough, during the patient’s final two hours, nurses told Teno that Oscar joined the woman at her bedside.

Furry harbinger of death
Doctors say most of the people who get a visit from the sweet-faced, gray-and-white cat are so ill they probably don’t know he’s there, so patients aren’t aware he’s a harbinger of death. Most families are grateful for the advanced warning, although one wanted Oscar out of the room while a family member died. When Oscar is put outside, he paces and meows his displeasure.

No one’s certain if Oscar’s behavior is scientifically significant or points to a cause. Teno wonders if the cat notices telltale scents or reads something into the behavior of the nurses who raised him.

Nicholas Dodman, who directs an animal behavioral clinic at the Tufts University Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine and has read Dosa’s article, said the only way to know is to carefully document how Oscar divides his time between the living and dying.

If Oscar really is a furry grim reaper, it’s also possible his behavior could be driven by self-centered pleasures like a heated blanket placed on a dying person, Dodman said.

Nursing home staffers aren’t concerned with explaining Oscar, so long as he gives families a better chance at saying goodbye to the dying.

Oscar recently received a wall plaque publicly commending his “compassionate hospice care.”
 

burmafrd

Well-Known Member
Messages
43,820
Reaction score
3,379
Does not suprise me. Animals are so much more in tune with the world and natural things then we are.
 

burmafrd

Well-Known Member
Messages
43,820
Reaction score
3,379
Cats are so much smarter then dogs that it is funny. Try and make a cat fetch a stick- the look of contempt it will give you is hilarious!
 

03EBZ06

Need2Speed
Messages
7,984
Reaction score
411
burmafrd;1563250 said:
Does not suprise me. Animals are so much more in tune with the world and natural things then we are.
Agreed.

I wonder what that cat would do if two people were dying near same time frame.
 

dcdallaschick

Member
Messages
315
Reaction score
16
The Real Mavs Man;1563085 said:
That's part cool.

And part creepy.

I liked the headline somebody put on this article at FARK.com:

Ever heard of Hello Kitty? Meet her evil twin, Goodbye Kitty
 

silverbear

Semi-Official Loose Cannon
Messages
24,195
Reaction score
25
I'm guessing you don't hear "here, kitty kitty" much in THAT nursing home...
 
Top