Throughout his career, when physician Allan Kind signed medical records, he wrote "A Kind, MD."
"A nurse told me, that described him exactly," said Betsy, his wife of 54 years. "A kind MD."
An infectious disease specialist, Dr. Kind was credited with saving many patients' lives by overseeing aggressive treatment. But in April, one year after his own diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, Kind and his medical team decided it was time to stop his chemotherapy and concentrate instead on managing his pain.
It was time to let go.
It was time to bring in hospice.
"Hospice was a gift to us. The staff was so well-versed in how to care for someone at this stage of life," Betsy said. "They noticed when Allan's decline accelerated and this was an important observation. They said it was time for his goodbyes."
Lying in a hospital bed in his Minnetonka living room, Kind saw his masked daughter and 15-year-old granddaughter. The next day his son and 9-year-old twin granddaughters visited.
"They kept their distance but came over to touch his hand before they left," Betsy recalled. "He was hospitalized at the first of the year, then COVID[-19] started so he hadn't seen them since January. They needed these last loving moments."