"Haleigh Poutres biological mother had a very emotional visit with her brain-damaged daughter this week, but is barred from telling anyone whether the girl moved, smiled or just lay still, her attorney said yesterday."
This reminds me of when Terri's family could not go public, if they wanted to see her.
If Terri's parents showed videos that they had of Terri, they would not have been allowed to visit her as evidenced in letter from following link.
http://www.cnsnews.com/pdf/2003/bushnell.pdf
What happened to freedom of speech?
This might be a lifesaver if you can remember the following advice, sent by a nurse, whose husband is a medical doctor.
Sometimes symptoms of a stroke are difficult to identify. A stroke victim may suffer permanent brain damage when people fail to recognize what's happening. Now, doctors say any bystander can recognize a stroke, simply by asking three questions:
1. ask the individual to smile.
2. ask him or her to raise both arms.
3. ask the person to speak a simple sentence.
If he or she has trouble with any of these tasks, call 911 immediately, and describe the symptoms to the dispatcher. Researchers are urging the general public to learn to ask these three questions quickly, to someone they suspect of having a stroke. Widespread use of this test could result in prompt diagnosis and treatment of a stroke, and prevent permanent brain damage.
FYI: Many complaints went out to various organizations and politicians regarding Ted Stith's trafficking from hospital to hospice.
Something's wrong when rehabilitation is no longer offered to a man 73 years young who begged for water but was dehydrated to death instead.
I hope someone took the complaints seriously. It's justice v. euthanasia, the baby boomers vs. the "unethical" bioethicists. I like it. unethical bioethicists. It so describes the death professors that lurk in the halls of Florida's colleges and universities. They are teaching med students how to kill.
Since the nobody else was playing by the rules, the tape was shown out of desperation. It worked temporarily.