Posted on 05/23/2011 3:51:35 PM PDT by wagglebee
TORONTO, Ontario, May 19, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) The question of whether end-of-life decisions, such as whether or not to withdraw life-support, should be made at the discretion of a doctor or family members is at stake in the Rasouli case, taken before Ontarios Court of Appeal yesterday. The court’s decision could dramatically change how these important decisions are made in the province in cases such as the much-publicized Baby Joseph case.
Doctors at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, where 59-year-old patient Hassan Rasouli has been since surgery in October, say the Iranian immigrant is in a persistent vegetative state, with no hope of recovery. They are appealing a Superior Court decision from April that ruled the doctors needed the familys permission, or permission from Ontarios Consent and Capacity board, in order to remove Rasouli from life-support.
The Rasouli family disagrees with the doctors diagnosis. They say that their father, who suffered bacterial meningitis after surgery to remove a brain tumor, is able to communicate with them and shows progress in his recovery, although he presently requires the assistance of a ventilator and feeding tube.
He talks to us with his eyes, said Rasoulis 27-year-old daughter, Mojgan. We want my father alive.
Rasoulis son, 23-year-old Mehran, said, When I speak to him, he opens his eyes. He knows me.
Rasoulis wife, Parichehr Salasel, was a doctor in Iran before the family immigrated to Canada last year. She has refused to give permission for her husbands ventilator to be removed, saying she believes he is improving and that removing life-support would violate his religious beliefs as a Shia Muslim.
The doctors factum in court, however, states, Doctors are obliged to offer treatment that can benefit the patient, and they are obliged not to offer treatment that is futile.
Dr. Brian Cuthbertson and Dr. Gordon Rubenfeld of Sunnybrook say that, as the medical experts, they should be the ones deciding when patients will no longer benefit from treatment.
“The underlying issue is whether or not doctors have the right to withdraw treatment that they view to be of no benefit to the patient, or in other words, at end of life, futile,” said Mark Handelman, lawyer for the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, which has intervener status in the case.
Were still without an authoritative answer to a very pressing question, Harry Underwood, the lawyer representing the doctors, told the court. How are patients best interests to be protected? Underwood argued that according to common law, doctors are not required to obtain consent before withdrawing medical treatment that they believe to be futile.
The Rasouli familys lawyer, Gardner Hodder, told the court the diagnosis of permanent vegetative state, such as Rasouli was given, is often incorrect. Withdrawing life-support, he added, is a medical treatment and, therefore, by definition of Ontario law would require consent.
Lawyer Hugh Sher, also representing the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, agreed with Hodder. The Superior Court decision of April was correct, he said: doctors do not have the unilateral right to withdraw life-support treatment. In cases such as Rasoulis the decision should be taken before Ontarios Consent and Capacity board, he said.
The Consent and Capacity Board is a group of lawyers, psychiatrists, and citizens in Ontario who are appointed by the province to resolve disputes such as in the Rasouli case between doctors and the family. Ontario is the only province with such a system. Rather than a lengthy court battle, which often ends with the death of the patient in question before a court ruling, the Consent and Capacity Board usually decides cases within a week.
Society needs to be very careful with decisions to withdraw life support and granting doctors the unilateral right does not protect people who are misdiagnosed or not actually dying and it doesn’t respect the beliefs and values of people who live with a faith tradition that includes certain ethical traditions, cautioned Alex Schadenberg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition.
The Rasouli case will determine whether doctors are required to obtain the consent of the patient, the patients guardian, or the Consent and Capacity board before withdrawing life support. This decision will apply to all life-sustaining interventions, including the withdrawal of hydration and nutrition.
The fact is that if the position of the doctors is upheld, doctors will not be required to obtain consent before they withdraw life-sustaining treatment that the doctor deems to be futile, he said.
Life is a gift from God, Rasoulis wife said following the court hearing. He would want to live.
In other words, doctors will be one-man death panels.
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The name of this hellhole is a cruel irony.
He got his BS in waste management. He’s more than qualified to exterminate Grandma. The family? they just get in the way. Pests, just asking all these stupid questions. I’m trying to ...
A court or doctors have no business deciding who lives or dies. The family does.
Whoever votes for life wins. If the family wants to let her croak, they lose. If the doctor wants to let her croak, he loses.
“A court or doctors have no business deciding who lives or dies. The family does.”
Except when your husband loves you the way Terry Schiavo’s husband did—NOT AT ALL BUT HE LOVED THE 200K HE WOULD GET ONCE SHE WAS GONE.
It’s the way of the culture of death. The left wants the power of life and death over all of us, and they will obviously not hesitate to kill us if they get the chance.
Do yu remember it was a lawyer that helped him murder his wife?
To me it’s simple: if you or your family can pay for your care, live as long as God wills. If the PUBLIC is paying for your care, and you are vegetative, withdraw life support and.... live as long as God wills.
First of all, this is Canada where people do pay for healthcare, it's called TAXES.
Secondly, those in a vegetative state almost never need "life support," they need food and water.
Thirdly, do you support the imposition of death panels if Obamacare is enacted? What about those on Medicare, they have paid for it.
Fourth, what EXACTLY do you mean by if the patient or family can pay for it? Does paying for insurance mean anything to you?
And finally, why do you only support death panels for those in certain conditions? Why not for everyone? We are ALL going to die eventually, why not withhold a basic antibiotic if a person cannot pay for it?
What the aitch does “vegetative” mean?
And of course people who want to take other peoples’ organs like it because it renders the helpless person into a non-person but with perfectly good organs that a more valuable human can use.
Excellent post. It seems that there are those who simply do not want to seriously consider these issues or their consequences. They just want to push it all aside with a quick remark and pretend that it isn’t happening. Unfortunately for us all, these decisions require more thought and compassion than that.
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