Posted on 08/12/2008 4:23:16 PM PDT by wagglebee
LifeNews.com Note: Michael Egnor, M.D. is professor of neurosurgery and pediatrics at State University of New York, Stony Brook and an award-winning brain surgeon who has been named one of New York's best doctors by New York Magazine. This editorial may not necessarily represent the views of LifeNews.com.
Yale neurologist Dr. Steven Novella and I have been involved in a vigorous discussion (example here) of the mind-brain problem in science and philosophy. There are real-world implications of our understanding of the mind, and nowhere are these implications more important than in the medical management of people with severe brain damage.
Dr. Novella recently posted a commentary on the Terri Schiavo case. Dr. Novellas post was prompted by a study just published in the journal Neurology that analyzes the media coverage of the affair and offers suggestions as to how experts and journalists can convey the truth of such complex cases to the public more effectively. These are laudable goals.
The crux of the matter, of course, is this: what are the facts in the Schiavo case, and, more generally, what are the real issues involved in the diagnosis of persistent vegetative state (PVS)?
Dr. Novella and I see things quite differently.
I am a neurosurgeon, and I believe that the diagnosis of persistent vegetative state, in Ms. Schiavos case specifically and in other cases more generally, is of dubious validity.
"Persistent vegetative state," defined succinctly but accurately, is the denial of subjective experience in a brain-damaged human being. PVS is the medical assertion that a human being is an object, but not a subject.
PVS is the only modern medical diagnosis that denies the personhood of a patient, and thus is fraught with logical and ethical problems.
Furthermore, patients diagnosed with PVS are precisely those patients in whom discernment of awareness is most unreliable.
We can never directly apprehend the thoughts of other people; we infer the thoughts of others only by their behavior. Patients with severe brain damage are precisely those people in whom expression of behavior is most impaired and in whom diagnoses based on assessment of behavior are most unreliable.
If the mind is entirely caused by the brain, the inference that a severe degree of brain damage could eliminate the mind is unexceptional. If mental causation is in part immaterial, one would approach the inference that brain damage would render a human being an object-but-not-a-subject with great caution.
The materialist inference in neuroscience was very much a part of the Schiavo debate, and that inference hadand continues to haveprofound ethical consequences.
In my view, the political efforts to save Ms. Schiavos life were well-intentioned and completely justified. I believe that many of the medical opinions offered publicly by physicians who favored withdrawal of Ms. Schiavo's hydration and nourishment were rank pseudoscience. What was done to Ms. Schiavo was an atrocity.
A detailed and thoughtful public exchange of views about the Terri Schiavo case by two experts in neurological medicinean academic neurologist and an academic neurosurgeon who have quite different opinions on this matterwould be very informative.
The discussion could take the form of detailed exchanges between Dr. Novella and me on specific aspects of the case, such as the autopsy report, the neurological exams, the nature and reliability of the diagnosis of persistent vegetative state, and the ethical and political issues involved. This discussion extends to many of the issues involving the materialist inference in neuroscience that Dr. Novella and I have debated over the past year.
I will begin in the next week or so by discussing the medical aspects of the diagnosis of persistent vegetative state. I hope Dr. Novella will join me in this important public discussion.
And denial of personhood is EXACTLY what the culture of death wants.
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I’d like to mention as a reminder that if any member of your family is ever brought to a hospital in an unconscious state, be very sure that the oxygen they are being given has been warmed.
Cold oxygen, especially through a nasal tube, has been linked with progressive brain damage in some situations, that could turn a recoverable state into an extended or permanent coma. It flows right past a major artery, and can significantly cool blood flowing to the brain.
Yet at the same time, be aware that under some circumstances of cardiac arrest and stroke, brain cooling can prevent damage. So the best advice is to talk to the doctor about it as soon as possible. If they have no idea what you are talking about, it would be wise to get a second opinion immediately.
It can be a situation where minutes matter.
Thanks for the reminder, I remember reading that but had forgotten.
Terrific!
“PVS is the medical assertion that a human being is an object, but not a subject.”
If that doesn’t sum it all up.
Never forget what the courts and the Culture of Death Industry did to her and to all of us.
The vicious determination of Terri's "husband in name only" and his sick and wifty death-advocate attorney to end her existence amounted to a true horror story. Throw in Judge Greer and his cohorts and we witnessed an evil cabal.
As I believed then, and still believe, Governor Jeb Bush could have and should have stopped the murder of this Florida citizen.
http://www.covenantnews.com/baldwin050329.htm
Is a living will the solution?
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