Posted on 08/06/2014 11:36:32 AM PDT by wagglebee
Aside from the misleading claim in the article referring to my sister, Terri Schiavo, as being in a persistent vegetative state (PVS), the Boston Globe did a wonderful follow-up story on Haleigh Poutres tragic situation.
Back in 2006, Haleigh made national news when her stepfather beat her into a coma. It was just a short time subsequent to this act of violence that her doctors decided this 13-year old had zero chance to recover and her legal guardian went to the courts for permission to remove Haleighs life sustaining care.
In fact, if Haleigh would have happened to survive the removal of the respirator and begin breathing on her own, she would have faced a slow death by dehydration and starvation.
Fortunately, by the Grace of God, Haleigh showed signs of life before doctors were able to enforce the courts decision to end her life. From the Boston Globe story, A new life for Haleigh:
A day after the states highest court authorized the withdrawal of life support so she could die with dignity, Haleighs eyes opened. She began tracking peoples movements with her eyes, and pointing to toys on command. She defied everyones expectations, and while she was never going to return to being the cheerful brown-haired girl who rode bicycles and twirled in dance recitals, she was not, as doctors had predicted, doomed to a life of virtually no awareness.
Despite Haleigh showing signs of improvement and escaping her court issued death sentence, her case yet again illustrates how relatively easy it is, not only for doctors to misdiagnose a patient, but also how little evidence is needed, for the court to approve the removal of life sustaining treatment this includes food and water, via feeding tubes.
It was for this reason that our non-profit, the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network, got involved in Haleighs case. In fact, Haleighs situation was one of the first cases we got involved in after we began operating as a non-profit in 2005, petitioning, then Governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney; making recommendations that the Massachusetts Department of Social Services provide certain safety nets of protection for persons and situations like Haleighs.
But this is just one incident that made headline news. Indeed, most of the general public is completely unaware of how much these types of decisions are made every day and how our medical rights have been eroded by laws that have been changed to make it easier to deliberately kill our medically vulnerable. How many of us, for example, understand that basic care, food and water (via a feeding tube) has been reclassified as medical treatment? As a result of this redefinition, feeding tubes can legally be removed from/denied to patients patients who are neither dying nor do they have any other extraordinary means of keeping them alive in all 50 states.
Unquestionably, by the number of calls we have received for help over the past nine years, there has been a major shift among a growing number of hospitals operating in our nation today. In this increasing amount of health care rationing climate in which we now live, where doctors decide whether or not a person will live or die based on their quality of life, the denial of food and water occurs every single day, across an unknown number of health care facilities. Certainly, none of us will ever know how many Haleighs out there were never given the opportunity to recover. Not long ago, there was a do no harm vow to act in the best interest of the patients, but that has now transformed into doing whats in the best interest of the hospitals. In short, whatever will financially benefit the hospital.
Haleighs case reminds me of Brenden Flynn. In 2002, 18 year-old, Brenden was involved in a fatal automobile crash; physicians essentially gave him a zero chance to have any kind of meaningful recovery. And if he did survive, his day-to-day care would be very costly. Brendens parents refused to give the doctors permission to, put him in a room and let him die, and instructed them to do whatever they could to help their son. Today, Brenden is married and has a beautiful 2-year old daughter and publicly speaks all over the country about his experience. I often wonder what the state would have done if Brenden lived in Massachusetts and his parents werent there to protect him.
Indeed, it is extraordinary families like Brendens and the adoptive family now taking care of Haleigh who are the real champions living among us. They dont see a person with a disability through the lens of our me first culture as being too costly, or an inconvenience, but rather as a human person whom they have been blessed with the opportunity to love, to care for, and to protect.
If we dont do away with this lethal quality of life mentality that has taken root in a growing number of minds in our nation today, then people like Haleigh will die along with the countless other vulnerable men and woman, young and old who were never given a chance to be loved.
And with Obama's death panels it will get A LOT worse.
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Girl's end-of-life case could haunt Romney (Haleigh Poutre)
A culture is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable citizens. Western culture will be judged harshly.
I will never understand how being starved and dehydrated to death is a death with dignity.
While there is life there is hope. Though I hope I never have to lie in a state of suspended animation. I just can’t help think of the movie, Million Dollar Baby. However, what use is a doctor that would rather fail to try than fail trying?
“And with Obama’s death panels it will get A LOT worse”
*************************
Yes, but at least public school children won’t be eating cupcakes.
http://dailycaller.com/2014/08/05/michelle-obama-policy-axes-cupcake-fundraiser-for-wwii-vets/
If I starved and kept my dog from water, I would be labeled the most vial names imagined and rightly so. There is nothing humane about a slow agonizing death
If it is so humane it should be used for capital punishment but instead we have to make their passing “painless and humane”. Screw their victims.
Court-ordered murder
and you know the judge probably felt NO remorse about ordering her death when she woke up
“I would be labeled the most vial names imagined and rightly so.”
Like test tube and mortar?
Sorry, I couldn’t resist.
I agree with you 100%. It’s OK to kill babies and supposed brain deads, but skip a meal for your dog and they lock you up.
Mass has not had a wonderful record in taking “care” of children lately.
if you ever do, you’ve gone insane.
Hugs to Haleigh and prayers to Terri.
I have no doubt that they will pressure parents who have a baby with Downs Syndrome or some other abnormality to abort.
Thank you for the Ping!
Yes, and I think that Deval Patrick’s reign is mostly responsible for that.
Horrible. Despicable.
Thank the Lord that Haleigh's story is being told. She's a living argument for the Murder-The-Disabled-Because-They-Are-Of-No-Use-To-Us crowd to think about.
IIRC, it was her father, the assailant who was one of those
involved in keeping her alive.
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