Dueling Texas Futile Care Bills Once Again Cause Gridlock
I wrote earlier about my worry that two competing bills filed in Texas about the state's discriminatory futile care law--one to put on a few bows of surface reform, the other to end the right of hospitals to refuse wanted life-sustaining treatment--would end up in gridlock. This wasn't prescience, it was precisely what happened two years go.
Alas, history is repeating itself. From the story:
Those who want to extend the time some hospital patients may live before their life support is cut off are worried that their proposal is running into a wall at the Capitol. Legislation by state Rep. Bryan Hughes, R-Mineola, would require life-sustaining treatment to continue for patients whose condition is deemed futile by doctors until a transfer to another medical facility can be arranged, if their family requests it.
Currently, hospitals can stop life support after 10 days in certain cases if the patient is terminally or irreversibly ill and cannot express treatment wishes. "No other state in the country has a law that Draconian," Hughes said. "The balance of power is completely shifted against the patients and the families."
Extending the time families have from ten to more days--as the phony "reform" bill would do--would accomplish nothing other than to validate futile care theory. More to the point, it would be an almost pointless exercise since Texas hospitals seem to have a tacit understanding that they will honor each other's futile care determinations. If that is true, it wouldn't matter whether the time was ten days or six months. What is required is for hospitals that wish to overrule patient/ family values be required to continue treatment pending transfer--otherwise as cost containment becomes increasingly the watchword, the futile care law could be used to dump patients due to their expense of their care.
But the medical establishment wants their raw power to tell patients and families, in effect, "We reserve the right to refuse service," to remain unimpeded. And catch the typical disingenuous misdirection of the law's defenders:
While critics call the Texas law extreme and restrictive, doctors and hospitals describe it as useful and unique. Among other things, doctors say, it addresses the details of advance medical directives and holds officials accountable for honoring living wills.No, the part of the law under attack permits physicians and bioethics committees to overrule patient advance directives. As for establishing "so many neat things for patient care," that is true--if you believe in the duty to die.
"We knew it was a groundbreaking statute. It does so many neat things for patient care," said Dr. Robert Fine of Dallas, who testified against the bill. He represented the Texas Medical Association and Baylor Health Care System.
The time has come to litigate this injustice vigorously, and for lawyers to get into the files of these hospitals and bioethics committees and expose the dirt!
Labels: Futile Care Theory. Texas.


7 Comments:
I love my state (*cue me putting on my Go Texan! shirt*) but sometimes I *hate* my state. I particularly hate my state's doctors, except for my personal physician, who is a GP AND an attorney specializing in malpractice cases.
I hate seeing the word "Texas" in any of your posts, Wesley - they always make me feel depressed.
If it's any consolation, I'm writing nasty letters to the Catholic Bishop's Confrence here in the state asking why they're not taking the right side on this. Gah!
Will someone PLEASE explain to me why this is going on in TEXAS of all places?
As far as I can tell, it's a blend of our internationalism and our very "I'll do it my way, dang it" attitude.
As an example of our character, we're very pro-gun (NO DEBATES! I'm stating a fact here for the sake of clarifying my position!), to the point that right now we're debating a law that would make it legal for citizens with a permit to carry openly. That's because we have very strong individual rights opinions. Now, whether that's for the best or not IS NOT A DEBATE FOR THIS WEBSITE, but it goes to show that we're very stubborn and will demand that we be allowed whatever we feel is best for *ourselves,* and nevermind what other people think.
When you combine our belief in individual rights with the international culture of Houston, where the majority of this issue is taking place, then you've got liberal minds telling independent conservatives that it's in our independent best interst to make sure nobody can tell us that we have to be hooked up to machines when we're dying.
Naturally, that's what's being *sold* to us, but not what's *actually* in the writings. That's where it gets hairy. The hospitals want to take away our freedom to choose whether we want to be kept alive or not, for the sake of rationing, while we're being told that the dying and severly disabled will be forced to live when they have no worthy life ahead of them.
It's part of our state character to want to stick it to anybody who might try to tell us what to do or how to live.
And Houston is a *very* international city. We've got a large Asian population (primarily Korean), a large South African population, a *very* large Mexican and Cuban population, and we have two major universities (U of H and Rice) that have very international characteristics. Plus, our medical center has lots of people, both patients and doctors, coming in from all over the world. St. Jude is just one excellent example.
Combine all those ideas from other countries with our independence, and, well, there you go.
Pulling the plug on Mean People-the Compassionate Thing to Do
I, personally, would like to put forward a case for pulling the plug on mean people. They can't have fulfilling relationships with others, are always fighting with other people, and are miserable because they are mean. Even if a mean person wishes to continue living and being mean, we should take that wretching decision out of her hands and allow her to die in peace, since they can't make that decision for themselves. This would free up resources for nice people, decrease family suffering, and truly preserves the autonomy of mean people-who may have to continue being mean at the behest of their family members or their former wishes, neither of which are valid, now that they are mean. Join me in making this world a reality. You can donate at www.freeethemeanpeople.org, and thereby make a difference for mean people everywhere.
Wesley: You pick the greatest illustrations for the blog sections.
T.E. Thanks. I guess that would be like Montana, "big sky" country where people also have a lot of geographical space per person and are, one would think, individualistic, independent, etc. New Hampshire would be the same way; I wonder what's going on there. Which state has the motto "Don't tread on me!"? Hey -- a compilation of all the states' mottos and using them to fight the death culture might be productive. Anyway, thanks, T.E. The one place in the U.S. to which my chart relocates well is in Texas, and I always wanted to live there, long before I knew that, and I've always felt good and done well when I've been there; what you described is my personality, too. There are one or two law firms I know of there that are on the futile care train. I still don't understand how Texans could have let the futile care crowd put one over on them as they have.
And WHY VIRGINIA?
Ianthe: Thanks. I work to find good ones.
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