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Dehydrate dementia patients to death to save money: British Medical Journal editorial
LifeSiteNews ^ | 07/16/12 | Hilary White

Posted on 07/16/2012 6:10:54 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM

Dehydrate dementia patients to death to save money: British Medical Journal editorial

by Hilary White, Rome CorrespondentMon Jul 16, 2012 15:38 EST

July 16, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) – The courts should not interfere with doctors who want to dehydrate to death incapacitated patients who are a drain on scarce financial resources, according to an editorial in this week’s edition of the prestigious British Medical Journal.

Raanan Gillon, emeritus professor of medical ethics and former chairman of the Institute of Medical Ethics governing body, wrote that a ruling last year by the High Court against dehydrating an incapacitated patient to death was “profoundly disturbing” because it took the life and death decision-making power out of the hands of doctors and required that the principle of the “sanctity of life” take precedence over other considerations.

The judgment, he said, “threaten[s] to skew the delivery of severely resource-limited healthcare services towards providing non-beneficial or minimally beneficial life prolonging treatments including artificial nutrition and hydration to thousands of severely demented patients whose families and friends believe they would not have wanted such treatment”.

He complained that the ruling required that, under the “stringent” Mental Capacity Act, in order to remove “life prolonging treatment” like a feeding and hydration tube, the patient himself must have left a legally binding “advance decision” in writing, and that previous casual or unrecorded statements to relatives were not sufficient grounds. 

The editorial, titled, “Sanctity of life law has gone too far,” said that unless it is overturned, the court ruling “will gradually and detrimentally distort healthcare provision, healthcare values, and common sense.”

Its logical implication, Gillon wrote, is that “doctors should no longer decide, in consultation with those who know their incapacitated patients, whether life prolonging treatment including artificial nutrition and hydration will be in their patients’ best interests.”

Furthermore, he said, the ruling logically means that those patients in “a higher than minimal state of consciousness must be similarly protected”.

The court ruling in question was that in the M Case, in which the family of a 52-year-old woman who was found to be in a “minimally conscious state” and who was “otherwise clinically stable,” were petitioning the court to have her feeding and hydration tube removed. The Court of Protection ruled that all patients in such a state must be referred individually to the Court of Protection if “life prolonging treatment” by artificial nutrition and hydration is to be withheld or withdrawn.

Mr. Justice Baker said in the September 2011 decision, “The factor which does carry substantial weight, in my judgment, is the preservation of life. Although not an absolute rule, the law regards the preservation of life as a fundamental principle.”

Justice Baker wrote that the courts should not “attach significant weight” to the patient’s previous statements unless they had been expressed in a way that could stand up to legal scrutiny. As in the case of Terri Schiavo in the U.S., M’s family had argued that her alleged previous statements indicated that she would not want to be dependent on such care.

Baker responded to this by ruling, “[Given] the importance of the sanctity of life, and the fatal consequences of withdrawing treatment, and the absence of an advance decision that complied with the requirements previously specified by the common law and now under statute, it would in my judgment be wrong to attach significant weight to those statements made prior to her collapse.”

Anthony Ozimic, communications manager for the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, said that the ideology being espoused by Gillon and the British Medical Journal is indistinguishable from the materialist utilitarian ethic that led to the elimination of the “unfit” by eugenicists in the early 20th century, including in pre-World War II Germany. 

“What is particularly disturbing about Professor Gillon’s opinions is that he is judging certain disabled people as having lives unworthy of life, balancing those lives against the needs of other patients and seeking to justify killing the disabled on the grounds of rationing,” Ozimic told LifeSiteNews.com.

“Such a utilitarian calculus is in substance no difference to the calculus made during World War II by the German authorities: that the disabled should die so that wounded soldiers could live. In any case, assisted food and fluids are basic nursing care, not futile medical treatments.”

As shocking as such pronouncements are to the general public, the idea that disabled patients should be euthanized, either directly or by the removal of food and hydration, is actually a mainstream of thought among many of the western world’s medical ethicists. Gillon himself is a major voice in the field as a former editor of the Journal of Medical Ethics and the author of the 1985 book “Philosophical Medical Ethics”.

Classical medical ethics, that held as paramount the principle “Do no harm,” has in large part been set aside in favor of the new utilitarian-based Bioethics, a formal or “normative” branch of ethical philosophy that seeks “the greatest good for the greatest number” according to the “principles” of “justice, beneficence and autonomy”.



TOPICS: Extended News; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cultureofcorruption; deathcare; deathpanels; deathpanels4all; euthanasia; healthcare; hillarycare; moralabsolutes; nazism; obamacare; prolife; romneycare; romneydeathpanels; socializedmedicine; terrischiavo; zot
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp
Under ObamaCare, voting for the wrong party might eventually be interpreted as a sign of dementia...

Communist nations have been known to lock up political prisoners in insane asylums. It discredits their beliefs and permits them to be tortured with electric and chemical shock treatment, sleep deprivation, psychotropic drugs, and locking them up together with the criminally insane.

21 posted on 07/16/2012 6:48:41 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Eric Holder's NAACP rally against the voter ID laws required the press to bring govt issue photo ID.)
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp
Denying folks water and food is murder.

So hospitals should be required to provide food and water to dieing people free of charge. Many sufferers of dementia would also require food and water via IV. Who pays?

What about antibiotics?

Cancer treatments?

When do you cut off the deadbeat losers without insurance or money?

22 posted on 07/16/2012 6:51:20 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: Doe Eyes

If you don’t have money or insurance, you should die. Who is willing to pay for the deadbeats?


Its not the government’s decision to make. PERIOD.


23 posted on 07/16/2012 6:51:59 PM PDT by Leep (Enemy of the StatistI)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
religions need to enter the situation as “no kill” caregivers, who, while not offering technological dehumanization, either, will only tolerate natural death.

This movement is starting. I'm involved in it. But we have one heck of an uphill battle ahead of us.

24 posted on 07/16/2012 6:52:56 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Doe Eyes

At some point, when you no longer pay into the system, you too will be a “deadbeat loser.”

Hope for your sake dehydration is as much fun as the death peddlers are trying to convince us it is.


25 posted on 07/16/2012 6:55:16 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp
Hope for your sake dehydration is as much fun as the death peddlers are trying to convince us it is.

Who do you propose pay for these people?

Obamacare?

26 posted on 07/16/2012 6:58:11 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: Doe Eyes
We already pay for them, without ObamaCare.

Before the government usurped this role, families, churches and communities took care of them. After this government and culture collapses, families, churches and communities will once again care of them.

"The measure of a civilization is how it treats its weakest members."

You individually don't measure up, judging by the drivel you're posting on this thread.

27 posted on 07/16/2012 7:03:41 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp

already happened here. terry schivo.


28 posted on 07/16/2012 7:05:10 PM PDT by cableguymn (For the first time in my life. I fear my country's government.)
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp
Being deprived of food and water is a form of torture.

The only reason for killing a person by torture is to 'comfort' the doctor doing it. He can have the illusion the death is 'natural'. It's not - there's nothing 'natural' about being starved to death.

Doctors need to man up.

If doctors are going to kill patients they ought to have to balls to do it right - take them down to the basement and shoot them - it's less painful for the patient and a whole lot more dignified...

29 posted on 07/16/2012 7:07:10 PM PDT by GOPJ (Innocent people dying was the objective of Fast and Furious......... Ann Coulter)
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp

Doesn’t sound like the Court of Protection does much protection .... sorta like a death panel, but that term might be too accurate.


30 posted on 07/16/2012 7:08:29 PM PDT by RetiredTexasVet (Skittle pooping unicorns are more common than progressives with honor & integrity.)
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp
We already pay for them, without ObamaCare.

So all people do, or at least should receive the medical care they require, and it should be provided for by the government, families, churches, communities ...

Do you really believe that all people in the United States actually get the medical treatment they need? Are you kidding?

31 posted on 07/16/2012 7:13:24 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: Lady Lucky; zot; Interesting Times

These two articles just prove that Sarah Palin didn’t know what she was talking about when she said that Obamauncare would have death panels. (sarc off)


32 posted on 07/16/2012 7:13:33 PM PDT by GreyFriar (Spearhead - 3rd Armored Division 75-78 & 83-87)
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To: GOPJ
The only reason for killing a person by torture is to 'comfort' the doctor doing it.

Not necessarily true. I know a number of doctors who routinely have to sign off on cases because they refuse to participate in the family's wishes to kill a patient. Too few physicians stand up against this growing euthanasia movement, but heirs are just as much a force in the growth of this movement as the physicians themselves. Don't underestimate the childrens' desire that the estate survive their parents' illness as a driving force in these cases.

It was clearly the primary motive for the husband in the killing of Terri Schiavo.

33 posted on 07/16/2012 7:14:16 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp
Oh, he's all for it.

Until the demented person is his parent, child or other person he loves.

34 posted on 07/16/2012 7:17:02 PM PDT by Lizavetta (You get what you tolerate)
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp

well that and he wanted to run off with his new women and he was still married to Terri.


35 posted on 07/16/2012 7:18:28 PM PDT by cableguymn (For the first time in my life. I fear my country's government.)
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To: GOPJ
If doctors are going to kill patients they ought to have to balls to do it right - take them down to the basement and shoot them - it's less painful for the patient and a whole lot more dignified...

Did you ever notice that almost all legislation that outlaws physician assisted suicide also indemnifies from prosecution those physicians who kill their patients by withdrawal of nutrition and hydration and terminal sedation? Ever wonder at that? Then read on...

Repackaging Death as Life – The Third Path to Imposed Death

36 posted on 07/16/2012 7:19:06 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Dr. Brian Kopp

AMEN, Dr. Kopp!


37 posted on 07/16/2012 7:21:12 PM PDT by Jude in WV
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To: Doe Eyes

“The measure of a civilization is how it treats its weakest members.”


38 posted on 07/16/2012 7:21:20 PM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Doe Eyes
If you don't have money or insurance, you should die. Who is willing to pay for the deadbeats?

Don't kid yourself - 'the poor' vote democrat - same with drug addicts, alcoholics, street bums etc. They will get care - that's what 'ObamaCare' is all about - helping the folks who never did anything for our country but take, take and take some more. Dems want them to live long and healthy voting lives...

The people ObamaCare plans on 'offing' are old white people - the one's who have supported all these 'care' programs all these years - the responsible one - the one's with money... and with nice homes that can be taxed out of existence.

Trust me, ghetto dwellers, illegal immigrants, their families, the homeless, etc will be taken care of just fine... Gays are democrats too - they'll be fine. Gays have more health care dollars spent on them than any other group (per person). No expense will be spared - they vote dem and donate money. That will continue.

Again, the ONLY large group dems want to deny care to are white and elderly - and conservative. Think - the greatest generation - think - grandmothers...

39 posted on 07/16/2012 7:22:25 PM PDT by GOPJ (Innocent people dying was the objective of Fast and Furious......... Ann Coulter)
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To: Doe Eyes
When do you cut off the deadbeat losers without insurance or money?

According to planned (non) parenthood, prior to their birth.

Seriously we are not talking huge expensive intervention...that might be a debate for another day. All we are talking is food and water. I would hate to meet the person who would deny a dying man a drink of water. That would have to be one mean miserable SOB.

40 posted on 07/16/2012 7:27:19 PM PDT by lovesdogs
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