Tuesday, April 28, 2009

By Ignoring the Rational Arguments Made Against Assisted Suicide, Yale Medical Professor Argues That Opposing PAS is "Not Necessarily Rational"

Some of our most formerly venerable medical journals are becoming increasingly radical. Critical Care Medicine, the journal for intensive care doctors, is a case in point. In the past, the Ethics Committee of the Society of Critical Care Medicine supported futile care theory, and quite notably, the Journal published an article arguing that "neurologically devastated" patients should be able to be killed for their organs assuming consent.

Now, Yale School of Medicine (of course) professor Constantine A. Manthous, MD, has published in CCM advocating for the permissibility of physician-assisted suicide. (No link, from the abstract):

Our collective repudiation of physician-assisted death, in all its forms, has complex origins that are not necessarily rational. If great care is taken to ensure that a request for physician-assisted death is persistent despite exhaustion of all available therapeutic modalities, then an argument can be made that our rejection constrains unnecessarily the liberty of a small number of patients.
Of course, "great care" is either not legally required under the assisted suicide laws--e.g, Oregon, Washington, and Switzerland--or not done, as in the Netherlands and Belgium. Montana? Why would "great care" be required when assisted suicide has been made a "fundamental right" under the state's constitution via judicial fiat?

Manthous's pretense is that there are no "rational" arguments being made against assisted suicide. From the article:

[T]here is room in this formulation for both nature and nurture to determine our moral selves. Our inherited neurologic circuitry is a template that is "finished" by institutional indoctrination which fires that circuitry repetitively throughout our development (e.g., "thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not kill," ad infinitum). It both feels right and, when fully indoctrinated, is programmed into the fully moral individual. There is a very large literature suggesting that during "critical periods" of brain development, environmental triggers (language for example) act on the neural template to potentiate development of particular skills or behaviors. Although evidence remains circumstantial (e.g., in primate studies) developing morality may follow a similar paradigm. Accordingly, my thesis here is that our repudiation of PAS and euthanasia is a moral intuition, without rational foundations.

Ironically, hiding behind all that neuro-theory, Manthous is the one failing to grapple with the many rational arguments made against legalization. Indeed, books, after articles, after speeches , have been given for two decades by opponents of assisted suicide making the rational case for continued prohibition. Yet these arguments are not mentioned once in the article. There are no citations, for example, from the voluminous rational arguments made by Rita Marker. No citations from the psychiatrist, Dr. Herbert Hendin, who is probably the world's foremost expert on euthanasia in the Netherlands.. No citations from Dr. Kathleen Foley, the country's most notable palliative care doctor and an opponent of legalizing assisted suicide. No citations from yours truly, who has written one book solely dedicated to the rational arguments against assisted suicide--Forced Exit--and another--Culture of Death--that deals substantially with the rational reasons for opposing assisted suicide, and, not coincidentally, was named Best Health Book of the Year for 2001 by the Independent Publishers.

I guess the theory is that if you ignore rational arguments, they just don't exist. It's just a matter of "repulsion" or "aversion."

But what happened to peer review? How does a professional medical journal of any quality allow an author to argue that there are no rational arguments against assisted suicide when there clearly are a boatload with which the author disingenuously refuses to grapple? More evidence that our institutions are losing both excellence and integrity.

It's hard to do justice to an article in a single blog. Here's another analysis of the article that gets into some areas I didn't.

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5 Comments:

At April 28, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

Boycott Yale.

 
At April 29, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

How the HELL can someone who is neurologically devastated give consent, and by what sheer insanity and abject stupidity could think or believe that one could know in advance what the exact circumstances would be if one's "advanced directive" were called into play. Not to mention how can people not realize what the real purpose of those "documents" is? On top of which, WHO says someone is "neurologically devastated"? Why do we put trust in doctors? Doctors are all to often -- well, we've see what they all too often are. SHEESH!!!!!

 
At April 29, 2009 , Blogger Lydia McGrew said...

I note the false dichotomy, too: "Moral intuition without rational foundation." Hmmm. Sure. And so is our "moral intuition" against torture, against eating babies, against...well, you get the picture. Something can obviously be both a moral intuition and rational.

And all that pontificating about how "thou shalt not kill" is just neurons firing. Like if he says it, he makes it so.

What pseudo-intellectual junk.

 
At May 01, 2009 , Blogger SuzieC said...

It seems to me that the assitance doctors are allowed to offer would-be suicides is unlikely to remain limited to writing a prescription for a lethal number of barbiturate capsules (or whatever it is they now order.)

If the state is going to license some people to help kill other people, why on earth would the practitioners -- more properly, the executioners -- need to complete medical school and a residency in order to practice their trade? We don't conscript physicians to carry out lawful executions in our prisons.

 
At May 25, 2009 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yeah, SuzieC, what a waste of medical training - not very economically rational to use a doctor to put people down! It reminds me of the way they swab the condemned convict's arm (at least on the movies) before administering the lethal injection. Why bother? It *would* make more sense to call them executioners outright and train them exclusively for that. But then they'd lose the godlike status and respectability of being a doctor.

 

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