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No Mercy in Florida
Weekly Standard via email ^ | 10/20/2003 | Wesley J Smith

Posted on 10/11/2003 1:06:43 PM PDT by MarMema

The horrifying case of Terri Schiavo, and what it portends.

AT 2:00 P.M. on October 15, 2003, Terri Schiavo's feeding tube is to be removed, after which she will slowly dehydrate to death. This is to be done at the request of her husband, Michael Schiavo, and at the order of Judge George W. Greer of the Sixth Judicial Circuit, in Clearwater, Florida. If the order is carried out, Terri will die over a period of 10 to 14 days.

The Schiavo case is only the most recent "food and fluids" case to make national headlines, after Nancy Cruzan (Missouri), Michael Martin (Michigan), and Robert Wendland (California). But Terri's case has gone a step beyond all the rest: Not only are Michael Schiavo's conflicts of interest so blatant that he should be allowed no say over her care, but Terri is also being denied rehabilitative therapy that several doctors and therapists have testified could wean her off the feeding tube.

Terri Schiavo collapsed from unknown causes in 1990 and experienced a devastating brain injury. Michael brought a medical malpractice case in which he promised the jury that he would provide Terri with rehabilitation and care for her for the rest of his life. The jury in 1993 awarded $1.3 million in damages, approximately $750,000 of which was set aside to pay for her care and rehabilitation. But once the money was in the bank, Michael refused to provide Terri with any rehab. Moreover, within months, he had a do-not-resuscitate order placed on her chart.

Had she died then, Michael would have inherited all the money. But he denies having a venal motive, claiming that the trust fund money is now exhausted. If true, this is bitterly ironic. For the past three years he has been in litigation, opposed by Terri's parents and her other relatives. Rather than the funds going to pay for medical therapists to help her, as the jury intended, much of it instead paid lawyers that Michael retained to obtain the court order to end her care.

Michael's second conflict of interest is deeply personal. He is engaged to be married and has had a baby with his fiancée, with another one on the way. The couple would like to marry, but Michael's wife, inconveniently, is still alive.

Judge Greer ordered Terri dehydrated based on dubious testimony from Michael, his brother, and his brother's wife that Terri told them she did not want to be hooked up to tubes--something he never told the malpractice jury when he sought a financial award. To the contrary, the malpractice jury was told that Terri could expect a normal lifespan.

Whatever Terri said or did not say, she certainly never asked to be denied the very treatment that might allow her to eat without medical assistance. Yet, in the ultimate injustice, Judge Greer refuses to permit Terri to receive rehabilitative therapy that could help her relearn to eat by mouth, even though several doctors and therapists have testified under penalty of perjury that she is a good candidate for tube weaning.

True, experts hired by Michael disagree. But so what? This isn't a case where we have to believe one side's medical experts or the other's. The issue can be decided empirically by providing Terri with six months of therapy to see if she improves. But Judge Greer, in a decision that elevated procedure over justice, won't do that because, he ruled, it would mean retrying the case.

In that unreasonable denial, it looked as if Greer might have crossed a crucial line. St. Petersburg attorney Pat Anderson, who represents Terri's blood family, believed that denying food and water and potentially rehabilitative therapy that could have made the feeding tube unnecessary, reeked of discrimination against the disabled. She filed a civil rights lawsuit seeking a federal injunction against the dehydration. Adding to the suit's potential legal heft and credibility: Florida governor Jeb Bush dramatically signed on to the federal case, urging the court in an amicus brief to prevent Terri's dehydration until she received treatment to determine whether she could relearn to take food and water by mouth. But once again, the law turned its back on her. U.S. District Court Judge Richard Lazzara ruled on October 10 that the federal courts had no jurisdiction and dismissed the case.

People are often shocked at how Terri has been treated as somehow less than a fully human person by the legal and medical experts who are determined to see her dead. They shouldn't be. This case illustrates how utterly vulnerable people with profound cognitive disabilities have become in this country. Not only are many routinely dehydrated to death--both the conscious and unconscious--but often the people making decisions to stop food and water, like Michael, have glaring conflicts of interest.

Some of the worst such conflicts come not from family members but from a medical establishment eager to remedy the chronic shortage of organ donors. The literature is brimming with advocacy that death be "redefined" to include a diagnosis of permanent unconsciousness. An article just published in Critical Care Medicine, the journal for doctors who specialize in treating the most seriously ill and injured patients, urges the adoption of an even more radical policy. Drs. Robert D. Troug and Walter M. Robinson, from Harvard Medical School and the Medical Intensive Care Unit at Children's Hospital, Boston, want to discard the "dead donor rule" requiring that vital organ donors die before their organs can be procured, writing: "We propose that individuals who desire to donate their organs and who are either neurologically devastated or imminently dying should be allowed to donate their organs, without first being declared dead."

The authors urge that the relevant question about organ donors should be changed from the current query--is the patient dead?--to, "Are the harms of removing life-sustaining organs sufficiently small that patients or surrogates [e.g., Michael Schiavo] should be allowed to consent to donation?" This is a prescription for moral freefall. Not only do the authors strongly imply that some of us have less value than others but that those so denigrated can be killed for utilitarian ends.

Troug and Robinson attempt to justify their homicidal proposal by claiming that we already take the organs of those declared brain dead but that such patients are really alive. I don't believe this is true, assuming proper diagnosis. But if I am wrong, it is a scandal of the highest order, for it means that society was sold a bill of goods about brain death by bioethicists and organ transplant professionals.

The answer to such a moral travesty would not be to expand medical homicide beyond patients who have suffered a total cessation of brain activity. Rather, it would be to permit doctors to procure organs only from donors who have been declared dead in the traditional manner; because their hearts have ceased beating without hope of restarting.

Advocacy in Critical Care Medicine for discarding the dead donor rule follows on the heels of the Ethics Committee of the Society of Critical Care Medicine's advocacy for legalizing "futile care theory," which would permit doctors to refuse wanted life-sustaining treatment--including "low tech" treatments such as antibiotics--based on the doctor's perception of the "quality" of the patient's life. "Given finite resources," the Ethics Committee stated in 1997, "institutional providers should define what constitutes inadvisable treatment and determine when such treatment will not be sustained."

This plan is currently being implemented. Medical and bioethics journals have reported in recent years that futile care protocols are being adopted quietly by hospitals throughout the country.

The Schiavo case has drawn attention only because her family is in profound disagreement about the care she should receive. If futile care theory takes hold, we may see fewer such cases, if only because the unilateral refusal of treatment will quietly take place without anyone speaking up for the patient.

The sad truth is, many practitioners of bioethics, medicine, and law no longer believe that people like Terri Schiavo are fully human. As a consequence, these patients are being systematically stripped of their fundamental right to life and, perhaps worse, are increasingly looked upon as mere natural resources whose bodies can be plundered for the benefit of others. If it is true that a nation is judged by the way it treats its most vulnerable citizens, a lot is riding on the Schiavo case.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: euthanasia; schiavo
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To: MarMema
I've read some of Peter Singer's writings. He frightens me, truly.

I wonder if he has much humanity left in him.
21 posted on 10/11/2003 1:37:27 PM PDT by Pan_Yans Wife ("Life isn't fair. It's fairer than death, is all.")
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To: Pan_Yans Wife
Harvesting organs before death is gruesome and evil.

You bet, and Communist China has it down to a science. There, a "criminal" (say someone who has committed the serious offense of posession of a Holy Bible) is sentenced to death for the crime and imprisoned untill a paying organ recipient is found, then sentence is immediatly carried out by a bullet through the front part of the brain so the heart continues beating while the executed criminal is transported to the harvesting facility.(It's not really a hospital, so I won't call it one.)

The progressive socialists hope to bring this efficient system here.

22 posted on 10/11/2003 1:38:17 PM PDT by Navy Patriot
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To: Navy Patriot
I keep reminding myself that communism and socialism are alive and well in America. They were not obliterated by the Cold War. We must always be on guard against these forces. Humanity is at stake.
23 posted on 10/11/2003 1:40:45 PM PDT by Pan_Yans Wife ("Life isn't fair. It's fairer than death, is all.")
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To: MarMema
http://host85.ipowerweb.com/~friendso/vid.html

I've seen the video [I recommend 'balloon']. OK - She's in there, there's no question about it. I would have no problem pulling the plug on a body being kept alive w/no brain activity. This is absolutely not the case. She's conscious, but impaired. Extra-legal action is warranted to prevent this senseless murder.

This is the kind of stuff that happens in certain parts of Europe. The elderly are afraid to go to the hospital in some countries, because their children can have them offed against their will, as if being old was some sort of disease. Given that they have socialized medicine, the gov't is only too happy to go along.

It's amazing how the Left can be indifferent to killing someone like Terri, but be leaking milk over a condemned killer about to be executed.
24 posted on 10/11/2003 1:44:48 PM PDT by walford (Dogmatism swings both ways)
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To: MarMema; All
My own father had a terrible stroke which affected his communication skills. He couldn't eat, drink, talk, read, write OR even use the right side of his body.

In his Living Will, he stated that no extreme measures should be made to keep him alive, "feeding tubes" specifically.

Well, he was AWAKE, and responsive so to heck with the his living Will...he was our DAD. His brain was injured, but he wasn't brain dead...there was a big difference and we all knew it.

We went from the feeding tube down his nose to a more permanent site in his stomach. They said he would NEVER be able to swallow again. His reflexes just didn't respond to anything they coaxed him with..mostly chips of ice.

Now for the good news. Six months later, my brother did what the "professionals" couldn't accomplish. He placed just a tiny dab of ice-cream on the tip of Dad's tongue...about the size of a pea. BINGO! Dad swallowed! His gag reflexes came back. Dad always did love his ice-cream :~)

That was TEN years ago and Dad is still with us. He eats "anything" and doesn't aspirate.

Never give up, people...

SW

25 posted on 10/11/2003 1:47:43 PM PDT by spectre (SW)
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To: MarMema
She'll die in about 3 days if water withheld and it will be painful.
26 posted on 10/11/2003 1:50:23 PM PDT by CindyDawg
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To: spectre
What a beautiful story. God still does preform miracles, and I pray for one for Terri.
27 posted on 10/11/2003 1:54:56 PM PDT by Ferret Fawcet ("A wise man's heart inclines him toward the Right, but a fool's heart...to the Left" ~Ecc. 10:2)
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To: drstevej; xzins; RnMomof7; newberger; The_Reader_David; George W. Bush
Please help with prayers on Wednesday for a disabled woman, and please keep your children far, far away from the ICU, Boston Childrens.
28 posted on 10/11/2003 2:06:18 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
Thanks for pointing out your FR page. The story of Hugh Finn is just awful. How his bishop and chuch leaders failed to protect him...in fact seemed to cheer on the killing...absolutely disgusting.
29 posted on 10/11/2003 2:07:30 PM PDT by stands2reason
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To: MarMema
The horrifying case of Terri Schiavo, added to this: "Vermont Medical Leaders Debate Legalizing Assisted Suicide" at http://www.lifenews.com/bio73.html sadly indicate that the culture of death is growing faster than the Culture of Life.

There will come a time (and I think we are fast approaching) when it is "too late"

What will change the culture?

At the heart of it, this is truly a basic problem and there is a straightforward solution. The sanctity of life is a simple truth that can and must be taught like any other subject. In Christian schools it should be the preeminent subject in religion class and receive the greatest attention and highest Respect. The war between the cultures of life and death is the single thing that has a bearing on the destiny of our nation and the very survival of our society. Every student beginning kindergarten is naturally pro-life. If the Christian schools were to nurture this gift and guide the proper formation of their Christian consciences with ongoing teachings while continuously building on successive lessons—over the course of thirteen years the vast majority of these students would be solid pro-life citizens. Protestant and Catholic leaders who control schools, Bible study, CCD etc. need only the will to make this happen. Each day this doesn't happen is another day of victory for the pro-death forces, because ignorance of the masses is the only hope the pro-death forces have for survival.

"...before nations can change, men must change"
30 posted on 10/11/2003 2:09:02 PM PDT by cpforlife.org (The Missing Key of the Pro-Life Movement is at www.CpForLife.org)
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To: cpforlife.org; Mr. Silverback
We have a lot of work to do. We all need to dig in and begin. It may be too late now, even. I am alarmed at the rapid progression of the death marchers.
31 posted on 10/11/2003 2:11:25 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MHGinTN; Coleus; nickcarraway; Mr. Silverback; Canticle_of_Deborah; TenthAmendmentChampion; ...
PING

Please let me know if you want on or off my Pro-Life Ping List.

The horrifying case of Terri Schiavo, added to this: "Vermont Medical Leaders Debate Legalizing Assisted Suicide" at http://www.lifenews.com/bio73.html sadly indicate that the culture of death is growing faster than the Culture of Life.

There will come a time (and I think we are fast approaching) when it is "too late"

What will change the culture?

At the heart of it, this is truly a basic problem and there is a straightforward solution. The sanctity of life is a simple truth that can and must be taught like any other subject. In Christian schools it should be the preeminent subject in religion class and receive the greatest attention and highest Respect. The war between the cultures of life and death is the single thing that has a bearing on the destiny of our nation and the very survival of our society. Every student beginning kindergarten is naturally pro-life. If the Christian schools were to nurture this gift and guide the proper formation of their Christian consciences with ongoing teachings while continuously building on successive lessons—over the course of thirteen years the vast majority of these students would be solid pro-life citizens. Protestant and Catholic leaders who control schools, Bible study, CCD etc. need only the will to make this happen. Each day this doesn't happen is another day of victory for the pro-death forces, because ignorance of the masses is the only hope the pro-death forces have for survival.

"...before nations can change, men must change"
32 posted on 10/11/2003 2:11:43 PM PDT by cpforlife.org (The Missing Key of the Pro-Life Movement is at www.CpForLife.org)
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To: grizzfan
Thanks. I'm sending an e-mail to Barbara Simpson (WND columnist), whose dad was a victim of fultile care protocols.
33 posted on 10/11/2003 2:18:03 PM PDT by litany_of_lies
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To: grizzfan
Never mind. Barbara is paying attention:

'Murder is legal if we say so'

http://wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=34935
34 posted on 10/11/2003 2:23:07 PM PDT by litany_of_lies
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To: Navy Patriot
I'm not doubting what you're saying about China, but do you have a link or a book to refer me to?
35 posted on 10/11/2003 2:24:59 PM PDT by litany_of_lies
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To: spectre
Has your father thanked you for overriding his living will? He can eat, I see. What else can he do? Converse with you? Enjoy tv? Walk?
36 posted on 10/11/2003 2:24:59 PM PDT by speekinout
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To: cpforlife.org
ignorance of the masses

The Bible indirectly address this issue -- this ignorance is "legion," as the Bible says in another reference. People have great knowledge only of degenerate popular "culture," I am afraid.
37 posted on 10/11/2003 2:26:51 PM PDT by Theodore R.
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To: MarMema
Advocacy in Critical Care Medicine for discarding the dead donor rule follows on the heels of the Ethics Committee of the Society of Critical Care Medicine's advocacy for legalizing "futile care theory," which would permit doctors to refuse wanted life-sustaining treatment--including "low tech" treatments such as antibiotics--based on the doctor's perception of the "quality" of the patient's life. "Given finite resources," the Ethics Committee stated in 1997, "institutional providers should define what constitutes inadvisable treatment and determine when such treatment will not be sustained."

Several years ago I read that the organ donations are usually taken from a "living" patient on a ventilator . The article noted that the need for certain organs could cause doctors not to be aggressive in their treatment .The patient would die of medical neglect. So we have the problem who defines death . At the time I asked my daughter to remove the permission off her drivers license .

Right now I believe that is a law in NY State that if a family wants antibiotics or feeding tubes and request them the Hospital can refuse. The state now holds your life in it's hands ..not your family

Removing feeding and hydration brings a painful death , I hope that her husband Michael has an opportunity to experience it himself some day. He is killing her for the blood money. The flames of hell lick at his feet

38 posted on 10/11/2003 2:32:52 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: Theodore R.
“My people are destroyed from lack of knowledge.” Hosea 4:6
39 posted on 10/11/2003 2:37:25 PM PDT by cpforlife.org (The Missing Key of the Pro-Life Movement is at www.CpForLife.org)
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To: cpforlife.org
Yes, indeed the Bible answers everything, but with 66 books most don't know much about it. A woman on "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" this week did not know that Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John are the four "Gospels." She chose the "four" Psalms, and there are 150 Psalms.
40 posted on 10/11/2003 2:38:44 PM PDT by Theodore R.
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