Friday, April 01, 2005

The Dutch Would Have Dehydrated Terri Even If Michael Had Wanted Her to Live

Ah, the Dutch. In their cold and sterile hands, there never would have been a public fight over Terri's life. The decision to stop the feeding tube wouldn't have been based on Terri's past-stated desires. It wouldn't have been based on what Michael Schiavo wanted. Nor, would Terri's folks have had a say. Instead, it would all have been up to the doctors.

The UK has a similar system in place as part of its system of socialized medicine. Indeed, a man with a Lou Gehrig's disease type condition was so terrified that he would be denied a feeding tube when he could no longer swallow, he sued for the right to receive food and water. He won in the trial court, but astoundingly, the government is appealing on the basis that with health care budgets so tight, the doctors should be the ones to make the call.

Now, lest we feel superior here in "choice central," that kind of pogrom, er, I mean program, is being prepared for us right here in the good ol' USA by the bioethics movement. It is called futile care theory, under which doctors (and health insurance executives?) are being empowered by hospital protocols to refuse WANTED life sustaining treatment if the patient's quality of life is seen as insufficient to warrant further care (other than palliation). In the event the family objects, an ethics committee decides. The way these protocols generally read, once the committee rules thumbs down on the treatment, the care can no longer be provided in the hospital, even if another doctor steps forward to provide it.

Futile care theory is just now beginning to be applied against actual patients. Time will tell whether the American people will accept this new game of "Doctor knows best."

5 Comments:

At April 02, 2005 , Blogger Jerri Lynn Ward, J.D. said...

I keep responding to people who think that these decisions should be made only by the doctor and patient (or proxie) that they are courting disaster. People give physician's opinions way too much deference.

Through my work with health providers, I increasingly find the perspective of doctors regarding these issues to be extremely odd, and certainly not within the mainstream of thought on morality.

I'd like to know what is happening to them in medical school.

 
At April 02, 2005 , Blogger Jerri Lynn Ward, J.D. said...

I keep responding to people who think that these decisions should be made only by the doctor and patient (or proxie) that they are courting disaster. People give physician's opinions way too much deference.

Through my work with health providers, I increasingly find the perspective of doctors regarding these issues to be extremely odd, and certainly not within the mainstream of thought on morality.

I'd like to know what is happening to them in medical school.

 
At April 02, 2005 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

The predominate views of bioethics about which I have been warning against for years are being taught in medical and nursing schools. This may be what is causing a subtle change in the attitudes of some.

And yet...I remain encouraged. As I have spoken and visited health facilities around the country, the dedication of health professionals to the wellbeing of all of their patients continues to impress.

 
At April 06, 2005 , Blogger Maggie said...

The slippery slope comes because doctors have forgotten the meaning of taking the Hippocratic Oath.

I know this is not quite relevant here, but I have a story to tell regarding a medical decision that cost my great nephew his life.

My niece was due to give birth, and she went into hospital because (I think) that her waters had broken. After a day or two she was sent home, only to be rushed back into the hospital. When she got there, the doctor examined her, said the baby's heart was weak, did not order an emergency operation, leaving the baby to die in the womb when it should have been a live birth. The quality life decision that was made in this sketchy story is that Nathan's life was not precious to the medical staff who made that ghastly decision. The student doctor who was there cried when they put the girl though a normal delivery.

Doctors should not be making that kind of quality of life decisions.

 
At April 14, 2005 , Blogger Francis said...

I worked my way through college as a medical detailman, and over the years got to meet almost all the physicians in two major urban counties. As I result, I formed some clear impressions on the basis of direct personal observations. My conclusion is that doctors, so far as I saw, are by and large a body of people to whome I would trust my life - MUCH more so than preachers, politicians or hysterical emotion-driven family members with their own axes to grind. Doctors I saw were by and large compassionate, well-informed and rational. President Bush, preachers and priests and other meddlers are often not.

 

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