code white

Jodi and I are preparing to leave on a trip, something to get us away from our lives and home, to give us some quiet and healing space. We plan to do some writing, to spend time outdoors, and to giving our morning some positive outlets. Before this can happen, though, there is something that has to be written here: the story of Caemon’s death.

Readers, please know you don’t have to read this. It isn’t incredibly graphic, but it is the very detailed story of what happened in Caemon’s last twenty-four hours for those who want or need to know. It won’t be easy for anyone to read.

Many people have wondered what happened, how Caemon went from what seemed to be progress to what then seemed to be his rather sudden death. What I can say with a fair degree of certainty now is that his death was not sudden. It felt that way because of the hope we maintained for him, but our sweet boy was starting the process of dying when his disease relapsed.

When I wrote the post “Baby Steps,” I was looking for every shred of hope I could find, every bright spot that might indicate Caemon was making progress. I was not alone in this. When the doctors would come in for daily rounds, they would share the news of the day, and we would all celebrate the small victories: Caemon’s swelling had gone down some, the new drug was holding the blasts at a steady level, he hadn’t had a fever, he was hungry for a few bites of food. Of course, looking back with the clarity of hindsight, these hardly seem like victories. In fact, I can see, as Caemon’s doctor so gently pointed out to us on the phone today, that so much of what we were seeing, so much of what I was writing about in that post was about Caemon beginning to die.

The day after that post was written, February 4th, we were relocated for awhile in a separate room for a maintenance issue. The night of the 3rd had been a rough one. Not only were we in a strange room, but Caemon was very uncomfortable. He had needed oxygen throughout the night, but he was also hard to soothe. This was in part because we had changed his pain medication. After having rashes in response to morphine, we moved him to dilaudid, but this seemed to be disturbing his sleep, so we had changed him one last time to fentanyl. That night, we had such a difficult time staying on top of his pain. He cried out frequently and was simply not feeling well. None of us slept much as we tried to keep him comfortable. Unfortunately, the next morning, he was due for a CT scan and would have to go under general anesthesia, so he was prevented from drinking after a certain time. The poor boy had a very sore throat, so the absence of his tea and water was distressing to him. He just could not get comfortable, but we distracted him, loved him, played his music, and eventually took him early in the morning for his CT scan and back to his room where he could drink as much as he wanted (and oh did he love his tea when we returned!).

Early in the morning, we had found some good levels of pain management for Caemon, and while he was sleepy, he was also conscious throughout parts of the day, and he always wanted one of us lying in his bed with him. We were happy to oblige, feeling the need to be as close to him as possible and also hyper-aware of just how exhausted we all were. Lying still was about all any of us could do. We talked with the nursing staff about making sure we had a more restful night, especially given that Caemon was scheduled for his first dose of radiation for his spleen the next morning. By evening, we were able to move back into our room perched over the city, and we began to settle in again, putting some of our trees back on the walls and trying to make Caemon comfortable.

It’s no mistake that we were surrounded by the most special nurses during these challenging days and nights, and it was no surprise that night when one of our favorite night nurses was with us. When his shift began, we came up with a plan to manage Caemon’s pain and to make an effort to get some rest. We all certainly tried. The pain was as under control as it could be, but soon Caemon started having some difficulty with his breathing. For several days, he had struggled a bit with his breathing and had done some grunting and breath-holding, all of which we thought was an effort to keep from coughing because the coughing hurt his throat. This difficulty was new though. He wasn’t holding his breath; he was just having a hard time. He was connected to an oxygen saturation monitor, and typically, we wanted to see numbers in the upper 90s to 100. His levels that night started to dip into the 80s and for longer and longer periods.

As this was happening, Jodi and I were increasingly aware that Caemon might end up in the PICU (pediatric intensive care unit). While we were certainly prepared for him to go there if he needed it, he also didn’t want to jump on extreme interventions if he was still functioning well in his room with the care of his providers. Before long, the resident physician on call did bring in some representatives from the PICU (the Rapid Response Team), who assessed Caemon and determined that he was fine to stay on our floor but would need extra monitoring and may need a trip to the PICU for some assistance with his breathing. A chest x-ray was performed, he had more monitoring, the extra team lingered and jumped into the room any time his numbers dipped or climbed, and his nurse came up with as many ideas as he could to help support him–everything from a blood transfusion to get his oxygen moving throughout his body to an anti-anxiety medication to calm his breathing to a dose of Tylenol for a creeping fever. Caemon even agreed to wear an oxygen mask, something he had never willingly done before. All of these efforts were mildly helpful, but none of them was going to stop this train we were riding.

As the medical treatments were administered, Jodi and I offered up everything we had in our mothers’ tool boxes. We read Caemon his favorite books. We sang him songs and told him stories from memory. We wrapped our arms around him and kissed him. We talked to him and rubbed his feet with lotion. We told him over and over how much we loved him and how much we believed in him. And through his mask, he told each of us separately that he loved us. He hugged our heads.

Soon, Caemon’s oxygen levels were dipping lower more frequently, and his pulse rate was higher and higher. He had been given some hydrocortisone (a steroid) to prevent him from having reactions to the blood, and at one point, we thought he was reacting to this. He start reaching his arms out over and over again. He was lying down, but he would ask to lie down. He would ask me to pick him up, and I would, and he would ask me again to pick him up. This disoriented state continued for some time and his oxygen levels dipped lower. Everyone knew it was time for him to go to the PICU. We didn’t want to go because we both had a feeling he wouldn’t make it back, but we knew it was time. The team readied a gurney for him and got his monitors set up. We gathered our things and backed out of the way while Caemon’s nurse picked him up to move him. When he laid him down, admidst the shuffle of trying to move his IV pole, the PICU nurse exclaimed, “He’s not breathing!” Everything became a blur of bodies and movement, and in seconds someone shouted, “We need to call a Code White!” If you’ve ever watched television shows about hospitals, you know that a Code Blue is indicative of a person experiencing a life-threatening emergency. A Code White is such an emergency for a child.

In moments, a crash cart was in the room along with upwards of thirty or forty people. Jodi and I first stood in the corner as we watched them begin to help Caemon breathe, as we watched his vitals on the monitor. We were both awash in panic when a nurse spotted us and asked whether we wanted to leave or not. We told her no, so she and another nurse sat us down while she began to explain what was happening. At this point, we could not leave. We had seen him go through everything. We had heard every medication that was administered. This nurse provided us the support we needed to stay informed about his care. I can tell you that he had multiple doses of epinephrine and dopamine. I watched his nurse pushing a large syringe of albumin into his tubes. I watched as he was intubated and as the attending physician from the PICU pumped air into his lungs.

Soon they had planned to transport him to the PICU, so we were ushered out of the room. This was around the time of the morning shift change, and I remember standing in the hallway waiting for his gurney to travel down the hall. In a matter of moments, our nurse friend who was to have been his nurse that day ran up to us with tears in her eyes ready to hold us. She and another nurse friend escorted us down the stairs so that we could meet Caemon at the PICU. Once we made it there, we were taken to a waiting room, and Caemon was wheeled into the PICU.

We were visited there by our nurse friends, then some doctors from the PICU who were hoping to get Caemon stable. Then the radiation oncologist showed up, and she was ready to bring Caemon in for his radiation as soon as he was stable. Everyone who came in had something slightly different to say, but the hope was still there that he would stabilize, that he would make it.

And then came the attending physician for the PICU. She sat with us and began to explain that she didn’t know whether they would be able to save Caemon and if they did, she didn’t know what shape his brain would be in, whether he would have any kidney function. I remember shaking as I took this in, and then she told us that children who were as sick as Caemon was don’t typically survive what he had been through. He had bleeding in his lungs. He didn’t have any platelets to speak of to stop the bleeding. He wasn’t doing well. I made her promise that she wouldn’t come in to announce his death, that whatever happened, we needed to be there.

A few minutes later, a nurse came to get us to see him. I think we tried to sit and watch (people kept giving us chairs), but the chaos around him was too much. By then our social worker was asking us to come with her. There was a quiet room where we could be. And then what seemed like seconds later, the doctor came back to tell us we needed to come in now. On our way, she told us she didn’t think they could save him, that the next step would be chest compressions but that this would be incredibly traumatic to his already traumatized body. We knew it was time.

When we entered the room, the doctor asked, “Is that his real blood pressure?” It was something like 21/15. “Yes,” was the reply. The doctor told us that if they stopped breathing for him, his heart would stop, that he would die, but that he was essentially already gone. Jodi and I could see this. Our boy wasn’t in that body. All that was keeping him alive at this point were the huge amounts of drugs making his heart pump artificially and the nurse who was manually pumping air into his lungs.

We looked at each other, confirmed that we agreed he was done, and we asked them to stop. They cleared the room of extraneous people, and we took our positions at the side of our son’s bed. They stopped the air pumping. They turned off the monitors. Soon, all around Caemon’s bed were his caretakers: his bone marrow doctor, an oncology fellow who had been with us from the beginning, his beloved child life specialist, our dear social worker, and two of the best, most lovely nurses at UCSF. We all stood by his side while Jodi and I told him our goodbyes. We did this for a few minutes watching as he no longer breathed, no longer moved. The oncologist took one of Caemon’s own stethoscopes from his IV pole, the red one I got him as a special BMT gift, and she listened for his heartbeat. After a few moments, she shook her head and burst into tears. We all did. Our beloved Caemon had died.

In the minutes following his death, we held Caemon, had some last moments as a family, and said our goodbyes. We went back to the special waiting room where we received Caemon’s caretakers for several hours, and some of his caretakers stayed by his side while people came to say goodbye to him. I have written about the care that followed his death. It was beautiful and honored him so well, and when I made one last visit to see my little boy’s body one last time, I was honored to see him so loved.

In the days and weeks following his death, we have come to understand a lot. Perhaps the hardest to accept is that he had been dying for a week and a half. His disease, we learned, was just too aggressive. His oncologist shared with us today that at the time they learned about his relapse, the level of his mutation in his body was back up to the level it was when he was diagnosed. It was as though he had never received a transplant at all. The disease was likely in his lungs and most certainly in his spleen and his liver. He had very active CMV and possibly other infections, and because they had done such a good job of helping him with each of his symptoms, it kind of didn’t seem like he was dying–not if you were looking for the miracles. The cold reality was, however, that his poor little body was so consumed with this incredibly vicious form of JMML that he was never going to make it. Those last cards the doctors were playing may as well have been thrown into a fire.

But we had to try, didn’t we? We had to believe that our boy could do this, that he could be a miracle or a breakthrough, and with that belief, we made the quality of his last days the best we could. We laughed; we read books; we snuggled; we spent time as a family; he even drank his favorite tea and ate nachos and a British Kit Kat.

I also know now that Caemon didn’t die in the PICU. He died as he left the arms of one of his favorite nurses to be placed on that gurney. That flailing he had done in my arms some time earlier was a boy trying to make sense of why he wasn’t staying in his body. There was a moment once the code had been called when I reached over to touch my son’s foot, and I remember it being the strangest sensation. He wasn’t there. I take comfort in knowing he was already gone, that the reason it took so much effort to keep his body working was that his body was simply done. Caemon may have been only three, but he was a boy who knew what he wanted and when it was time to go. I am grateful for that.

It is terribly hard to know that his disease was always going to win, that we were never going to get ahead of it, that despite his own strength, our boy was never going to overcome it. We will forever be brokenhearted over the loss of our precious son, but we also know that everything that could have been done for him–medically, spiritually, emotionally–was done. Of that we are certain.

69 thoughts on “code white

  1. Thank you for sharing this,.I am so sorry for your loss. My heart breaks for you both. I am very, very proud of you guys.

  2. My heart aches for both of you. I hope that your time away will bring you some healing as you start on that journey. The strength that you have shown and shared has taught me so much and I thank you.

  3. Was this painful to read? Of course. Am I glad I read it? Yes. As others have said, what a gift to share this story with us–even those of us who are relatively far flung, fellow parents especially, need some help coming to terms with this tragic loss, and your sharing here helps. Thank you. But these details are not what I will remember of Caemon, this wonderful little boy. His amazing creative strength in surmounting fears (like with his beloved appliances :-)), his love and bravery, his beautiful face and spirit from photos and videos, and his moms’ spectacular strength and courage–all the stuff I learned through other posts and at a memorial service that was beautiful beyond words: these will be the legacy of Caemon and his story for me.

  4. Thank you so much for sharing your story with us and the story of your beautiful son Caemon. I’m still thinking of him and you guys every day. Wishing you all the best on your healing journey. I think it’s safe to say that we will all remember Caemon.

  5. As difficult as this was to read, it felt so important to do so – to bear witness to the total of Caemon’s journey, your journey. I hope that you find some comfort in the fact that he is no longer suffering. What a brave battle he fought, and at just 3 years old! Such strength is astounding to me. Your family is so very special. I wish you a healing and restful trip.

  6. Thank you for sharing this story with us. Your bravery and unshakable hope, and Caemon’s legacy, are inspiring.

  7. Only someone who has gone through a death of a loved one will truly know your pain. Loss of a child is worse. I lost my dear husband one Tuesday morning that I thought was just another typical Tuesday. He walked out of the door and that was the last time I saw him alive! Time helps but you never forget. Sometimes it seems like yesterday and then I remember it has been 5 and a half years. I still miss him every day and you will Cameon. I am sorry for your loss but say it again, everything that could be done, was done. God Bless you and your family.

  8. The first time I ever experienced the sensation of someone not being in their body anymore was when my grandfather died. It is by far the strangest feeling but also the most comforting one I have ever had.
    Caemon’s legacy will live on always and he has touched the hearts and lives of so many. His story will always be a part of ours. Watching him grow and then watching as he bravely battled a disease that was going to win is harrowing to say the least.
    My heart aches for you and Jodi and I hope that you both are able to find some solace and peace.

  9. Thank you for sharing this. My heart aches for you and any parent who has ever had to endure what you have gone through, and will continue to go through as the months go on. I hope that you and Jodi can find a little bit of peace on your getaway. Caemon will forever be in our hearts and minds. XO

  10. Thank you for sharing your struggles… I am so sorry for your loss, I pray I never have to know this feeling. And I hope that the future is kind and welcoming to you.. Caemon spirit will always be with you 🙂

  11. Thank you for sharing Caemons legacy of love! May you both feel Caemons peace and strength in the days ahead. Our heart aches for your loss. Caemon/Croc love shared.. lives on.

  12. Bless you and your wife. I truly admire your strength! I hope you two can find some peace on your trip. Thank you for sharing Caemon’s last day with us, he is such an amazing little boy, with two amazing Mothers. ❤

  13. I know the brave fight it takes to fight Cancer…my brother died of Cancer. cancer SUCKS! I don’t hate….but I do, HATE cancer.

    Caemon, is an incredible boy and I’ll never forget the bravery that he has shown us all through your words. Thank you for sharing them. As I cried reading the events of his death, I marvel at your ability to put his story into words. It was part of his journey and thank you for sharing.

    I hope your time away helps you both…to me time is the only thing that does help. Blessings and love to you both as you spend some time for yourselves to share and come together, to love each other, hold each other up, allow each other to be angry and sad. Cling to each other, and be gentle with each other. Love yourselves…

  14. Timaree,
    bless you for writing this. I feel sure that you will look back and be glad you did, and I surely appreciate it.

    This may sound odd, that I would so much want to know what happened at the end, to a boy I never met in person. The thing is, you brought me and others to care deeply. When I care about someone, and they die, I want to know how it was for them, hoping it was not too much pain, distress, all of that. I want to know even though I realize I may not get the answers that are desired. Closure matters, being able to visualize helps. Especially helpful to me, because for the blog readers, there were the baby steps and then there was the ultimate crash and sorrow.

    Thank you for reaching into the pain and reliving this yet again.
    I hope you already know how deeply sorry I am that your beautiful loving Caemon fell prey to this dastardly evil JMML. that you know how impressed I am with the strength he displayed, the three of you pulled out of who knows where, in this fierce battle.

    On a personal level, I have been there with the “be ready to move up to the PICU” situation, with my grandson, and I remember the way we clung to keeping him in a room where we could hold him, snuggle him, and we could believe he was going to be OK. Of course that was a very different situation, not cancer, not a relapse — but he could not breathe and had really low oxygen stats and we were glued to watching that monitor for three weeks — dips low and you go, stays steady and it’s one more day.

    I am so glad to hear that you all got to tell each other of your love, and say your goodbyes, even though you didn’t use the word goodbye, but you knew it might be closing on you. I was very afraid that he went into a crisis so sudden that you didn’t have any time.

    My gratitude to you for sharing this; it is beautiful and so powerful.

  15. no longer can i ever say “i cannot imagine” when confronted with the death of a child. your words–this whole blog, really–have awakened a deeper compassion in me than i’ve ever known before. thank you for allowing us to grieve with you. it is an invaluable kindness that you were willing to write this all down and let us into that intimate room, into those sacred moments of holding on and letting go.

    along with the immeasurable sadness, my heart is buoyed by gratitude that you and jodi and the medical team gave caemon a safe place to let go.

    i will never forget your boy. my children will wear their croc tshirts until they fray at the seams, and even then we will keep them.

    love you, my friend.

  16. I had lost track of your blog until I saw a post elsewhere regarding your loss and hoped it wasn’t the same Caemon. I’m so devastated for you both and I’m keeping you in my thoughts during this difficult time.

  17. So beautifully written, especially the last bit when you explain when you realised he had already left his body. Beautiful and gut wrenching. Thank you for sharing.

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