Posted on 06/17/2005 12:09:38 PM PDT by neverdem
fairly callous and clumsy statement for a doctor to make.
Does having the durable power of attorney for health care mean that you have to retain a lawyer that you trust? 8^)
Correct, the Living Will or Advanced Directive provides insight into the patient's prior wishes (assuming he/she cannot make decisions about his/her care). The Next of Kin has the responsibility to carry out the wishes stipulated in the Living Will or what the patient's wishes 'would be'.
So, I guess one must chose his/her spouse very well or designate someone to make those decisions.
The elites wanted Terri Schiavo dead because her execution was a victory for the medical killing ("bioethics") movement. I expect the Times to continue this crusade with the same fervor they showed when they demanded that private golf clubs admit women.
But, more fundamentally, I am old enough to remember a time in this country when you didn't need a piece of paper to stay alive. The right of a person to live the life they were granted by a power beyond the ken of mortal man, even if it meant living that life under difficult circumstances, was an unalienable right. That Schiavo case has eroded this concept, perhaps irreparably.
Winners:
Lawyers
Eugenecists
Euthenasia advocates
Abortionists
Losers:
You
Me
Where I live, there is no law that says you have to choose a spouse or family member as your designee.
Where I live, there is no law that says you have to choose a spouse or family member as your designee.
Sorry for the repeat. :(
Ping re post 4
I agree, in Nebraska you do not designate your spouse or next of kin as designee...it automatically happens legally. I am sorry if that was not clear.
That's a bummer.
In my neck of the woods, you can designate who you want. I have no spouse or children...have a brother...but I designated my best friend instead. Not that I don't trust my brother, but he's never home...keep thinking if I needed him to make a decision, he wouldn't be there. My friend is more available.
Oh, you can designate someone else other than next of kin.
A living will is a sure way to guarantee that you will get substandard medical care.
You are indemnifying the hospital/doctor against neglect.
"A living will is a sure way to guarantee that you will get substandard medical care.
You are indemnifying the hospital/doctor against neglect."
That is probably one of the most ill-informed comments that I have seen on this Board (and there have been many that the Schiavo case has elicited).
A living will provides your family with some direction at a time when it can be very difficult to make decisions. More importantly, one should TALK and DISCUSS his/her wishes with family so that there are no disagrements. Again, the responsibility is to fulfull the wishes of the patient.
A quote from an editorial by Dr. Quill:
In considering such profound decisions, the central issue is not what family members would want for themselves or what they want for their incapacitated loved one, but rather what the patient would want for himself or herself. The New Jersey Supreme Court that decided the case of Karen Ann Quinlan got the question of substituted judgment right: If the patient could wake up for 15 minutes and understand his or her condition fully, and then had to return to it, what would he or she tell you to do?
NEJM April 21, 2005 issue Volume 352:1630-1633
No code does not mean 'no care'...the issue is the goal of the care being delivered.
Comfort care alone vs. going all out full court press with pressors, intubation, chest compressions, etc. Where problems arise is when there is a diffence in goals of care for a loved one between family and physicians...in which case communication needs to be improved...this does not mean that one should not have a 'living will'.
Also, Living Will does NOT equal No Code...they are two very different documents and are often confused.
If I have a living will and God forbid suffer a MI, I WANT to be treated...It is only if I suffer severe anoxic/hypoxic brain injury that I want my wife to step in and stop unhelpful medical interventions. As you know we can keep patients alive years and years with no hope for neurologic recovery...I do NOT want that done to me and I would think (and this is supported by various surveys) that most people do not want that done to them and want the choice to stop medical interventions.
I apologize, I did not mean to question your experience by my 'ill informed' comment, but this issue has been horribly misrepresented by the Press, Congress, Talking Heads, and many on this and other Boards.
later read/ping
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.