-------- Original Message --------
| Subject: | [Health_and_Healing] Legalizing Euthanasia by Omission - And Making It a Doctor's Order | 
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| Date: | Sun, 25 Sep 2011 12:33:34 -0700 (PDT) | 
| From: | Sue Cifelli <prmis11@yahoo.com> | 
| Reply-To: | Health_and_Healing@yahoogroups.com | 
| Legalizing Euthanasia by Omission - And Making It a Doctor's Order |                          |                    
| by E. Christian Brugger, D.Phil., Senior Fellow and Director, Fellows Program | |
                        DENVER, Colorado, AUG. 24, 2011 (Zenit.org                           ).- A problematic new end-of-life medical form                           is rapidly gaining ascendency in U.S.                           healthcare. It is called the "POLST" document.                           (In my own state of Colorado, it's called a                           MOST document.) The acronym stands for Physician Orders                             for Life-Sustaining Treatment. (MOST =                           "Medical Orders for Scope                           of Treatment;" its provisions are almost                           identical across states.) Click                             here to see an example of a standard POLST                             document.                            The document consolidates on a single form                           provisions formerly dispersed                           over several documents: it acts as a living                           will specifying the scope of medical                           interventions a patient wishes in case of                           incapacitation; it makes specific provision                           for a do-not-resuscitate order (DNR); it has a                           box to check in the event a patient wishes to                           refuse treatment with antibiotics; and it                           allows a patient to designate a proxy decision                           maker.                                                    Similar to other advanced directives, patients                           complete the POLST form when their capacities                           are in tact and the document becomes effective                           when consciousness is compromised.                                                    But different from older-type directives, the                           POLST document has provision for the signature                           of a physician (or physician assistant). This                           gives the designations on the document the                           force of an actionable medical order.                                                   The national trend, supported                             by Compassion & Choices (formerly                           the Hemlock Society), is to structure                           state laws on medical directives in accord                           with the POLST paradigm (as illustrated by its                           recent adoption by states such as California,                           Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, New York,                           Pennsylvania, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah,                           Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin).                                                    Why is the document problematic? I will speak                           from first-hand knowledge of the legislation                           that normalized the document in Colorado. I                           believe my criticisms are relevant to all                           POLST-type laws in the U.S.                                                    The Colorado law (signed in summer 2010)                           abrogated an extremely important condition on                           living wills going back two decades. The                           former law authorized adults to direct medical                           professionals to withhold or withdraw                           life-support only on the condition that they                           were terminally ill (or in a so-called                           persistent vegetative state [PVS]). So for                           purposes of the law the refusal was                           conditioned by the fact that a patient was                           already dying. (The PVS provision was accepted                           under the false assumption that it was a                           terminal condition.) Forty-five percent of the                           states in the U.S. presently impose similar                           statutory limitations on the removal of                           life-support.                                                    The POLST-type legislation removes the                           condition that a patient is terminally ill or                           diagnosed in a PVS before a refusal order is                           actionable. In other words, the new law                             permits any adult patient to refuse any                             treatment at any time for any reason in the                             event they lack decisional capacity; and                           health care professionals, directed by a                           doctor's medical order, ordinarily would be                           (and are) required to carry out the order.                           Although the law for strategic purposes is                           rhetorically formulated as bearing upon                           end-of-life medical decisions, it sets forth                           no requirement that a patient's refusal of                           life-support must be limited to end-of-life                           conditions.                                                    If someone refuses life-support with the                           specific aim (or intention) of causing his or                           her own death, the person is choosing suicide.                           Morally speaking this is no different from                           ingesting a lethal dose of medication, or                           sitting in a running car with the windows                           closed and a hose stretching from the tail                           pipe to the cabin. "Why are you doing X?" If                           the answer is: "To die," then the person is                           intending self-killing, suicide, and that's                           always wrong.                                                   But isn't it the case that terminally ill                           patients also can direct the refusal of                           life-support for purposes of bringing about                           their deaths? It is true, the condition of                           terminality does rule out the possibility that                           patients will be motivated by suicidal                           intentions when taking advantage of the                           liberties permitted by the older-type law. But                           in establishing the refusal of life-support in                           the context of medical conditions diagnosed as                           "terminal," the older-type law privileged as                           the normative context for refusing                           life-support the motive                           "to-be-free-from-burdens-in-my-remaining-days-of-life."                           Suffering from a condition from which one was                           dying, the law granted a person the civil                           right to refuse procedures that prolonged the                           dying process.                                                    This is not the place to rehearse the ethical                           argument for the legitimate removal of                           life-support. Suffice it to say that until                           recently, common ethical opinion accepted the                           judgment that if some treatment was futile or                           excessively burdensome, then a person                           legitimately could refuse the treatment, even                           if its refusal promised the hastening of                           death. [Note: the procedure, not the life,                           is judged burdensome.] One intends to be free                           of the burden of painful, risky, or futile                           treatments during one's final days of life,                           and one accepts that one's death may be                           hastened as an unintended consequence.                                                    The POLST-type law grants adults the civil                           right to direct healthcare professionals to                           remove life-sustaining procedures when those                           procedures are not futile and when the burden                           imposed by them would be offset by a                           reasonable hope of recovery. It juridically                           extends the ordinary context for the refusal                           of life-support to include the motive of                           bringing about death. Without using the term,                           the new law authorizes euthanasia.                                                    This is not the only problem with the POLST                           model, but it's the most serious problem that                           the model introduces. Other problems, such as                           the document's provision for the removal of                           food and water from patients for whom they                           reasonably would be judged to be                           ordinary/proportionate care, or the simplistic                           designation, "No Antibiotics," whether or not                           such drugs are medically indicated, already                           infect older type documents.                                                    When the Colorado Catholic Conference,                           which I assisted, was fighting (ultimately                           unsuccessfully) at the state capital in Denver                           to amend the POLST-type legislation before                           passage to reintroduce the condition of                           terminality, we argued that the legislation as                           written was effectively legalizing euthanasia                           by omission. Some legislators believed that we                           were being alarmist. They thought that because                           physician-assisted suicide was not legal in                           Colorado, nor explicitly legalized by the                           proposed legislation, we had nothing to fear.                           We said we thought this was short-sighted,                           that groups like Compassion & Choices                           would find fertile soil in the law for                           advancing its aims. Most were unconvinced.                                                    On August 17, 2011, Compassion &                             Choices (CC) launched a nation-wide                           public education campaign entitled "Peace                             at Life's End â€" Anywhere." The                           euphemism means "legal self-killing anywhere                           in the U.S." (The press conference was held in                           Denver, Colorado!) The central purpose, indeed                           the sole purpose of the campaign is to tell                           people everywhere that they can kill                           themselves legally anywhere in the U.S.; all                           they've got to do is to refuse life-support,                           in particular food and water. The Web site                           reads:                                                                            One method of peaceful dying…universally                           available, legal, safe, painless and suitable                           for a gentle parting in one's own home…is                           the purposeful refusal of food and fluids, in                           medical jargon known as voluntarily stopping                           eating and drinking (VSED).                                                    "VSED," its press                             release  stated, "is a legally                           recognized option for mentally competent                           adults who wish to end their suffering." And                           best of all, "it requires no special laws or                           regulations. VSED is legal -- for patients and                           their caregivers -- today, in every state."                                                    The POLST document is not a precondition for                           the success of CC's campaign. Any living will                           that permits the removal of food and water                           would be adequate. But the new document sure                           helps.                                                    If the POLST model is not already legally                           recognized in your state, five to one chance                           that legislation is being drafted at your                           state house as we speak. You might call your                           legislator and find out.                                                                                               * * * E. Christian Brugger is a Senior Fellow of Ethics and director of the Fellows Program at the Culture of Life Foundation , and the J. Francis Cardinal Stafford Chair of Moral Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver, Colorado.  |                    
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DENVER, Colorado, AUG. 24, 2011 (

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