Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Commentary: When a feeding tube borders on the barbaric
Minneapolis Star Tribune ^ | May 28, 1997 | Dr. Ronald Cranford, MD

Posted on 10/20/2003 9:08:00 PM PDT by Chancellor Palpatine

Just a few decades ago cases of brain death, vegetative state, and locked-in syndrome were rare. These days, medicine's "therapeutic triumphs" have made these neurologic conditions rather frequent. For all its power to restore life and health, we now realize, modern medicine also has great potential for prolonging a dehumanizing existence for the patient.

We realize this, and we're starting to deal with it. In landmark legal cases from Karen Quinlan to Nancy Cruzan, society has come to see that it's sometimes sensible to stop treatment in patients lingering in permanent vegetative states (PVS). That progress has been hard-won and welcome. But anybody who thought that the dilemmas of PVS were troublesome hasn't seen anything yet.

The United States has thousands or tens of thousands of patients in vegetative states; nobody knows for sure exactly how many. But before long, this country will have several million patients with Alzheimer's dementia. The challenges and costs of maintaining vegetative state patients will pale in comparison to the problems presented by Alzheimer's disease.

Since women now live much longer than men, and since Alzheimer's is a disease of the elderly, most of these patients will be female. Many will spend their last years largely unaware of themselves or their surroundings.

If people really understood the reality of this dementia, I doubt they'd find it an acceptable lifestyle. Being in a state of wakeful oblivion for five to 10 years or sometimes longer is a degrading experience. The degradation is borne not so much by the patient, who may be completely unaware of him- or herself, but by the patient's family. They must endure the agony of seeing a loved one lying there year after year, often sustained only by a feeding tube.

Just as we've tried to come to grips with appropriate care of PVS patients, we've got to confront the dilemma of dealing with the demented. Comfortable solutions aren't easy to find.

So much in medicine today is driving the public towards physician-assisted suicide. Many onlookers are dismayed by doctors' fear of giving families responsibility in these cases; our failure to appreciate that families suffer a great deal too in making decisions; our archaic responses to pain and suffering; our failure to accept death as a reality and an inevitable outcome of life; our inability to be realistic and humane in treating irreversibly ill people. All of this has shaken the public's confidence in the medical profession.

People fear becoming prisoners of medical technology, and their fears are largely justified. When medicine and society refuse to face up to tough questions of treatment and honor individual values, physician-assisted suicide and active euthanasia start to look like the only open exits.

Consider, for example, the case of Jamie Butcher -- a young Minnesota man of 34 who spent half his life in a vegetative state. After tending his inert body for 17 years, his parents finally made the heartbreaking choice to let him die. You couldn't find two more loving, caring, intelligent parents than Jim and Pattie Butcher. Their decision to remove Jamie's feeding tube should have been relatively simple -- and entirely private. But right-to-lifers and some disability groups fought the Butcher family every step of the way, assailing their legitimate choice to withhold futile treatment as an act of euthanasia.

This is just the sort of inflammatory talk that threatens to drive society down the path towards physician-assisted suicide. Medical organizations, courts and other groups generally agree that there are some important distinctions between stopping treatment and acting to cause a patient's death. By insisting that withdrawing a feeding tube is akin to euthanasia, these special interest groups are undermining their credibility.

And they're creating unnecessary confusion for the growing numbers of families losing a loved one to Alzheimer's. Vegetative state cases are not nearly as numerous as cases of Alzheimer's. But both kinds of cases force families to mull over the same question: When the human brain is so badly damaged that its owner can no longer think or even eat, what should be done?

This is a question families should feel free to answer for themselves -- without fearing intrusion from outsiders. And when you really think about it, the idea of placing a feeding tube in a patient with advanced Alzheimer's disease makes no sense at all, medically or morally. It borders on barbaric and cruel. It's just the kind of dehumanizing medical intervention that the public finds so distasteful. It's the sort of practice that undermines confidence that doctors have the best interests of patients and families at heart.

In Europe, feeding tubes are rarely seen in nursing homes. Once a patient is so severely brain-damaged that only artificial nutrition can sustain life, many doctors and families rightly ask, "What's the point?" In many civilized countries, the question wouldn't be asked -- because placing a feeding tube in someone with end-stage dementia wouldn't even be considered.

But here in the United States, many caregivers wouldn't consider not placing a feeding tube in the same patients.

It's hard to understand why. If we want our loved ones to live and die in dignity, we ought to think twice before suspending them in the last stage of irreversible dementia. At it is, it seems that we're not thinking at all.

-- Ronald Cranford, of Bloomington, is a neurologist at Hennepin County Medical Center and a faculty associate at the University of Minnesota's Center for Biomedical Ethics


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: schiavo; terri; terrischiavo
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 41-6061-8081-100101-114 next last
To: MarMema
Understood. I digress . . .

In a free and just society, parents should not be denied by the courts the opportunity to care for their child in the manner they see fit. Matthew 6:24

61 posted on 10/20/2003 10:41:26 PM PDT by BraveMan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 54 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine
RealPlayer:

VIDEO #1

VIDEO #2

62 posted on 10/20/2003 10:43:06 PM PDT by SerpentDove
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: The Red Zone
And there are two types of tube feeding. With one, regular food in a balanced diet is purreed and pushed through the tube; with the other, a formula is pushed. Patients on regular food thrive over long duration; patients on the formula do not last so long as Terri has survived. She has a strong will to live, IMHO.
63 posted on 10/20/2003 10:46:17 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]

To: MarMema
OMG! That guy is talking just like a Nazi. He's rationalizing killing disabled children.... unbeleivable.
64 posted on 10/20/2003 10:59:53 PM PDT by fly_so_free (Never underestimate the treachery of the democratic party. Save the USA-Vote a democrat out of offic)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: The Red Zone
The old Hippocratic oath is no longer used. I'm not kidding. So what they are doing - death pushing is acceptable under the current oath. What traditional doctors abide by is what the insurance carriers will pay for. They knew insurance contracts better than treating medical problems.

Traditional docotrs prescribe according to the insurance contract hoping to make it up in volume. The best interest of the patients - is the LAST thing on their minds. I am not exaggerating or overstating this.

65 posted on 10/20/2003 11:09:49 PM PDT by nmh
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine
This removal of a feeding tube really bothers me.

We arrest people that starve helpless animals but are condoning starving a helpless human being.

Maybe we need to call in the 'Humane Society'! (sarcasm off)

66 posted on 10/20/2003 11:12:44 PM PDT by Dustbunny
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Dustbunny
PETA has been amazingly quiet! Don't they claim that humankind are after all merely animals?
67 posted on 10/20/2003 11:15:05 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 66 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine

68 posted on 10/20/2003 11:17:45 PM PDT by SerpentDove
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine
A Pox on this man's house, and any other curses anyone else can think of!

Murdering bunch of despicable creatures from the pit.
69 posted on 10/20/2003 11:22:00 PM PDT by ladyinred (Talk about a revolution, look at California!!! We dumped Davis!!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: TheDon
It is the epitome of a culture that no longer recognizes love or goodness to be the value of life. It is a culture that values only one thing: convenience, function, some kind of production beyond consumption. That is a crass utilitarian culture.

Thank you for posting this!

70 posted on 10/20/2003 11:23:04 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 34 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine
My religious tradition forbids any act that hastens death. Its one thing if God takes a life, that's His Will and we're powerless in the matter. But if its a choice between saving a life and condemning a human being to death through conscious human volition, that's an easy choice to make. We should never deprive someone of food and water and watch them die. That's barbaric and we wouldn't treat our animals that way. When a loved one is in pain and suffering and maybe terminally ill, we have a duty to keep them alive and make them comfortable and pray that God will heal him or her or if Our Father in Heaven wants to put an end to their suffering then it is an Expression Of His Infinite Love And Mercy For His Children. But we must never for a moment, in matters of life and death, presume to place ourselves above God.
71 posted on 10/20/2003 11:40:44 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine
If people really understood the reality of this dementia, I doubt they'd find it an acceptable lifestyle.

Unfrigginbelievable! Well, my goodness, being old and ill isn't an acceptable "lifestyle" so let's kill them off? I shouldn't be shocked, but I am.

A friend's mother had Alzheimers. She often said, with the state her mother was in (confused and upset the majority of the time), it would be a blessing for her to pass. I can understand THAT but it's a quite a distance to decide to kill them.

72 posted on 10/20/2003 11:43:20 PM PDT by Dianna
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: MarMema
This one should get the "Viking Kitties" attention in my opinion. We don't need full ARTICLES of this "Enlightenment"
pro death CR*P here.

Here Kitty, Kitty, Kitty.

ZZZZOOOOOTTTTT!!!!

By the way I didn't see you on my Prosicute Michael Schiavo
thread today. I pinged you because I thought you wanted to see it.

Guns, linux and Liberty. ;c)
73 posted on 10/20/2003 11:47:25 PM PDT by Coral Snake (Why do we allow a purjuring, software pirate traitor to continue to run our computers?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: Coral Snake
I did groceries and then spent the entire evening watching the session....let me go back into my pings...
74 posted on 10/20/2003 11:49:32 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies]

To: TheDon
[...] medical advances in the area of pain control now allow doctors to so completely soothe intense suffering that this argument for accepting euthanasia has become virtually useless.

Unless you work for the DEA, and routinely threaten to deprive doctors of their livelihood (that is, their occupational licenses) if they use this pain control. Or even if they prescribe more than "the norm" of OxyContin.

75 posted on 10/20/2003 11:57:00 PM PDT by Greybird ("War is God's way of teaching Americans geography." -- Ambrose Bierce)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 34 | View Replies]

To: goldstategop
My religious tradition forbids any act that hastens death. Its one thing if God takes a life, that's His Will and we're powerless in the matter.

I struggle with this. I don't believe that medicine can keep anyone alive that God doesn't wish to live. Does that mean we keep fighting, always? Do we always have to do what we CAN do? I think that answer is sometimes no.

My grandfather had a heart attack while in the actual process of signing a DNR. Because the paper hadn't yet been signed they had to try to restart his heart. I was glad they didn't succeed. I wish they hadn't made his dying moment a crisis and a struggle.

76 posted on 10/20/2003 11:57:18 PM PDT by Dianna
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 71 | View Replies]

To: nmh
>>The old Hippocratic oath is no longer used.

Maybe we should pass a law to require that to be reinstated.

77 posted on 10/21/2003 12:04:28 AM PDT by deannadurbin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 65 | View Replies]

To: Dianna
We all want our loved ones to live a full life. Usually its clear to us when they've reached the end of their lives. Sometimes it isn't and that's when its heart-wrenching. Its lives in "gray" areas where you have a difficult time reconciling your own beliefs with the reality of what's happening in front of your own eyes. No one said life was easy. Ultimately we have to make the decision we think is best for those we love and bear the consequences for the rest of our lives. Its called being human.
78 posted on 10/21/2003 12:05:11 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 76 | View Replies]

To: Chancellor Palpatine
Every person knows when they have allzheimers. When it gets so bad that you are 'out' more than you are 'in' life is not worth living. I will never burden my family with my living corpse. A very long walk in the deep deep woods is in order. That's my choice. I would not have it forced on others. It just strikes me as supremely selfish to allow oneself to slip into vegetable land knowing you could last that way for as much as twenty years or more.
79 posted on 10/21/2003 12:41:12 AM PDT by mercy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Coral Snake
Yes, we do need this information. Ronald Cranford was Michael Schiavo's neurologist. He testified against Terri and slammed three other doctors who had recommended swallowing tests be done on Terri. (They had seen Terri and filed affadavits in Greer's court. I think this must've been when Lazarra kicked it back to Greer, iirc)

Please, Don't call the kitties just yet. Instead google up cranford and schiavo...

We need to become a little more acquainted with Ronald Cranford.

80 posted on 10/21/2003 12:41:28 AM PDT by keri
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 41-6061-8081-100101-114 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson