Posts Tagged ‘a-moment-like’

Barbara Coombs Lee: Bishops vs. Patients’ Rights

Friday, February 12th, 2010

I have written how recent changes to Ethical and Religious Directive (ERD) Number 58 compel Catholic hospitals and nursing homes to either disregard your end-of-life choices or violate the letter of the Directive. The powerful Catholic Health Association says Compassion & Choices and I are exaggerating; the change is insignificant. To bolster its claim of “no change” CHA points to another Directive, Number 59, that the free and informed judgment of patients should always be respected. What CHA fails to note is the condition at the end of that sentence, “unless contrary to Catholic moral teaching.” But, one might ask, what exactly does that mean? How broad is that caveat? Who decides – doctor, bioethicist, Bishop? What sort of request, expressed in a living will, may not be honored in a Catholic hospital or nursing home , even before the recent change in ERD 58? Picture this situation: My mom received an Alzheimer’s diagnosis when she was just 59, and we both had a pretty good idea what lay ahead. Not far from my home northwest of Chicago is a fine long-term care facility with a wing dedicated to patients with Alzheimer’s. My mom has been there ten years. She has been well cared for, getting the day-to-day support I couldn’t give on my own. Even as I have watched and grieved her drifting away, I am grateful for the time we have had together over those ten years. Then she lost her appetite and her ability to feed herself. It’s hard for her even to swallow. Two days ago her care coordinator asked me about a feeding tube. I knew what Mom would choose. My family was supportive. I told the care coordinator Mom wouldn’t want a feeding tube in this condition and I took another little step down that slow path of grief. But the care coordinator wants me to meet with their chaplain before making a decision. She says my mom is not actively dying and there’s no indication that she wouldn’t tolerate a feeding tube. Will I have to find another facility and arrange a transfer to honor what I know would be my mother’s wishes? The recent change to the ERD sets out some narrow exceptions when artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) is not obligatory: if a patient is actively dying; if the tube causes serious side effects like infection; if the patient’s body cannot assimilate the food and water. But, “My loved one doesn’t want to eat and can’t swallow. I don’t want to force them to stay alive.”– will that justify an exception ? Here’s another scenario: The phone rings. It’s the assisted living facility’s care supervisor; my father collapsed just after dinner. “The EMTs are taking him to Mercy Hospital.” An hour later I am driving down Baltimore Pike into southwest Philadelphia. I find my father in the ICU. Hooked up to all the tubes and equipment he looks so much older than a week ago. Over the next day and a half of tests and waiting – learning it’s a stroke – he doesn’t wake or stir. I’m sitting with him mid-morning when the neurologist arrives. He goes over results and treatments they’ve tried. “It’s unlikely that your father will regain consciousness, and if he did, very unlikely that he would return to normal mental function. We need to think about next steps.” My father designated me his health care proxy for a moment like this. His advance directive is clear, and he’s been blunt in conversation. “Look, I’m eighty-three years old, and I’ve had all the breaks. If something happens, I don’t want to sit in a chair and drool for years.” I make an appointment to see the social worker in her office, where we’re joined by a priest. I tell them we’re ready to remove life support. She turns to the priest. He says, “Mercy Hospital is committed to honoring advance directives for health care decisions as long as they do not contradict Catholic principles,” The priest has a copy of my father’s advance directive and reads from it. “If I am ever consistently and permanently unable to communicate, swallow food and water safely, care for myself and recognize my family and other people, and it is very unlikely that my condition will substantially improve, I would want to die rather than have life-sustaining treatments.” The priest looks up. “Your father’s living will suggests that in his unconscious state his life is no longer worth living. Under these conditions, removing life support would be an act of euthanasia by omission.” Catholic bioethical thought has evolved over centuries. The ERDs that govern care in Catholic hospitals and nursing homes are extremely nuanced. Your directions about life support may or may not be honored in a Catholic institution. Your concern about the burdens of medical interventions might justify forgoing life-sustaining medical treatment. But a wish to be allowed to die under certain circumstances might not. Have you talked with your family about end-of-life options? Good. Is an advance directive in place? Excellent! Will that directive be honored in a Catholic health care facility? We cannot know for sure. More on Health Care

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Barbara Coombs Lee: Bishops vs. Patients’ Rights

Obama To Dems: GOP Will Attack Regardless Of How You Vote

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

In a final push to get health care reform through the House of Representatives, President Barack Obama warned lawmakers on Saturday that a vote against the legislation would not immunize them from Republican attacks. The president, according multiple attendees, played the role of political prognosticator during his roughly 30 minute address before Democratic caucus members on Capitol Hill. Addressing, implicitly, those conservative Democrats who are worried about voting for a nearly trillion dollar health care overhaul, he insisted that they would not be safe from partisan attack even if they opposed the bill. “He certainly talked about the politics and he said that the Republicans want us to fail and no one should feel if they as a Democrat helped us to fail that they would be [free of their attacks],” said Rep. Henry Waxman, chair of the powerful Ways and Means Committee. “None of you can expect the Republicans not to go after you if you vote against this bill,” Waxman continued, channeling the president. “They want this bill to go down for their own partisan reasons.” Another high-ranking Democratic hill staffer briefed on the meeting put it this way: “Obama’s main message was that the GOP won’t go any easier on you if you vote against the bill. It’s a tough vote, yes, but they’re going to take heat either way.” While politics took up much of the discussion, policy took up very little. Obama, according to several lawmakers, did not talk about the public option or the controversial amendment to make abortion restrictions much tighter. He discussed, primarily, the momentous nature of the vote and the need for the party to be on history’s right side. “This is the moment,” said Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) That this is what we all went into politics for. That this was a historic moment. That seven president shave tired to pass health care and haven’t done it. And that this was a moment like civil rights or social security or Medicare.” In particular, Obama singled out Rep. John Dingell – the longest serving member of the House — who, on Saturday, presided over chamber for first time since 1965 Medicare vote. “He thanked all the chairs,” said Rep. Joe Crowley (D-N.Y). “He thanked all leadership and he mentioned specifically John Dingell.” By the meeting’s end, the vast majority of the attending lawmakers seemed confident of health care reform’s passage – though certainly there is the potential for flare-ups as the abortion amendment introduced by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) comes to consideration. “We are feeling pretty optimistic that we can defeat this,” said Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) a primary opponent of the amendment. “Democracy is not pretty but it works,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), another opponent of the Stupak amendment. “I was here in 1993 when the ship went down. This thing isn’t going down.” More on Barack Obama

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Obama To Dems: GOP Will Attack Regardless Of How You Vote