The Sixth Sense of Cats

My brother-in-law just sent me an extraordinary article printed in the Italian Corriere della Sera today. As a huge cat-lover, I just had to post this piece. For those of you who read Italian, see: http://tinyurl.com/2yu4e7 Everyone else, read these excerpts from the current issue of the New England Journal of Medicine (no kidding!). The entire article can be read at: http://tinyurl.com/2kaw5l The photo of Oscar, by the way, was taken from Albany’s Timesunion: http://tinyurl.com/3cppyo I have read stories of dogs having these uncanny abilities, but this is the first time I have read one about a cat. Since I don’t want to spoil this mind-boggling albeit rather morbid account, I will stop here, but if you are easily spooked, do not read any further. Just a note: this cat looks very much like my sweet Puzzola!

A Day in the Life of Oscar the Cat

David M. Dosa, M.D., M.P.H.

Oscar the Cat awakens from his nap, opening a single eye to survey his kingdom. From atop the desk in the doctor’s charting area, the cat peers down the two wings of the nursing home’s advanced dementia unit. […] Slowly, he rises and extravagantly stretches his 2-year-old frame, first backward and then forward. […] In the distance, a resident approaches. It is Mrs. P., who has been living on the dementia unit’s third floor for 3 years now. […] She passes him without a glance and continues down the hallway. […] Oscar decides to head down the west wing first, […] continues down the hallway until he reaches its end and Room 310. The door is closed, so Oscar sits and waits. He has important business here.
Death CatTwenty-five minutes later, the door finally opens, and out walks a nurse’s aide carrying dirty linens. “Hello, Oscar,” she says. “Are you going inside?” Oscar lets her pass, then makes his way into the room, where there are two people. Lying in a corner bed and facing the wall, Mrs. T. is asleep in a fetal position. Her body is thin and wasted from the breast cancer that has been eating away at her organs. She is mildly jaundiced and has not spoken in several days.
[…] Oscar […] leaps up onto the bed. He surveys Mrs. T. She is clearly in the terminal phase of illness, and her breathing is labored. Oscar’s examination is interrupted by a nurse, who walks in to ask the daughter whether Mrs. T. is uncomfortable and needs more morphine. The daughter shakes her head, and the nurse retreats. Oscar returns to his work. He sniffs the air, gives Mrs. T. one final look, then jumps off the bed and quickly leaves the room. Not today.

Making his way back up the hallway, Oscar arrives at Room 313. The door is open, and he proceeds inside. Mrs. K. is resting peacefully in her bed, her breathing steady but shallow. […] Oscar jumps onto her bed and again sniffs the air. He pauses to consider the situation, and then turns around twice before curling up beside Mrs. K. One hour passes. Oscar waits. A nurse walks into the room to check on her patient. She pauses to note Oscar’s presence. Concerned, she hurriedly leaves the room and returns to her desk. She grabs Mrs. K.’s chart off the medical-records rack and begins to make phone calls. Within a half hour the family starts to arrive. […] Thirty minutes later, Mrs. K. takes her last earthly breath. With this, Oscar sits up, looks around, then departs the room so quietly that the grieving family barely notices.

On his way back to the charting area, Oscar passes a plaque mounted on the wall. On it is engraved a commendation from a local hospice agency: “For his compassionate hospice care, this plaque is awarded to Oscar the Cat.” Oscar takes a quick drink of water and returns to his desk to curl up for a long rest. His day’s work is done. There will be no more deaths today, not in Room 310 or in any other room for that matter. After all, no one dies on the third floor unless Oscar pays a visit and stays awhile.

Note: Since he was adopted by staff members as a kitten, Oscar the Cat has had an uncanny ability to predict when residents are about to die. Thus far, he has presided over the deaths of more than 25 residents on the third floor of Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Providence, Rhode Island. His mere presence at the bedside is viewed by physicians and nursing home staff as an almost absolute indicator of impending death, allowing staff members to adequately notify families. Oscar has also provided companionship to those who would otherwise have died alone. For his work, he is highly regarded by the physicians and staff at Steere House and by the families of the residents whom he serves.

3 Comments

  1. Oooh Dear, I don’t think Florence Nightingale would have
    liked it would she? Especially when Oscar starts to lick
    his bottom again.
    There are serious problems with MRSA here in UK hospitals
    and now C-difficile is making things worse. I don’t think Oscar
    would be welcome in our hospitals no matter how psychic
    he may be.
    Trouble is they are so appealing.

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