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What price life?
New Scientist ^
| Tuesday, October 17, 2006
Posted on 10/17/2006 11:00:25 AM PDT by orionblamblam
Charlotte Wyatt, who has serious brain, lung and kidney damage, weighed only 1 pound and measured just 5 inches when she was born three months prematurely on October 14, 2003. The child hit the headlines soon after birth as her parents battled in the courts to force doctors against their medical judgement to provide artificial ventilation if her condition worsened.
Her parents won the year-long legal dispute, which cost the taxpayer an estimated £500,000 ($929,000). In addition, the girls medical treatment costs around £300 a day, and has totalled an estimated £1.1 million so far.
... Charlottes parents have separated and both say they cannot care for her and want foster parents to look after her. Both parents live on state benefits and have been described by hospital sources as infrequent visitors to the hospital that their daughter has never left.
(Excerpt) Read more at newscientist.com ...
TOPICS: Philosophy
KEYWORDS: cradletograve; cultureofdeath; nannystate; prolife; schiavo
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Interesting quandry. How much should the taxpayers pay to keep someone alive?
To: orionblamblam
How much money would it take for you to let her die?
2
posted on
10/17/2006 11:02:03 AM PDT
by
Petronski
(Living His life abundantly.)
To: orionblamblam
If the taxpayers are going to take over the cost of medical care, they have to pay what it takes. Maybe nationalizing the health care system wasn't such a bright idea, after all!
3
posted on
10/17/2006 11:04:32 AM PDT
by
gridlock
(The 'Pubbies will pick up at least TWO seats in the Senate and FOUR seats in the House in 2006)
To: Petronski
How much money are you willing to expend? That 300 pounds/day has to be paid by *somebody.* Would you pony it up?
As for how much money would it take for me to let her die... Hel's Belles, son, I let thousands of people die every day without costing me a dime. So do you. "People die" is a basic a fact of life. There is no injustice in someone keeling over from a disease. (Murder, of course, is a different matter.)
4
posted on
10/17/2006 11:07:35 AM PDT
by
orionblamblam
(Prayers... give people the feeling they're doing something without making any real effort.)
To: orionblamblam
Isn't it wonderful how people are always willing to pay for their principles with other people's money?
To: orionblamblam
No, I mean, if the decision was yours, how much would you have to be paid to let her die?
6
posted on
10/17/2006 11:09:50 AM PDT
by
Petronski
(Living His life abundantly.)
To: gridlock
> they have to pay what it takes.
That's the4 question, though. One major source fo the rising cost of healthcare is that medical science allows people to live today who would have died yesterday... but that requires neato new expensive technology.
Consider this hypothetical: ten years from new, the tech is available to revive to verifiable life someone who has been shot in the head with a twelve guage. They'll be drolling, screaming morons, but alive nonetheless. Price tag: fifty million to turn 'em back on, and a grand a day for life support.
What to do?
7
posted on
10/17/2006 11:10:27 AM PDT
by
orionblamblam
(Prayers... give people the feeling they're doing something without making any real effort.)
To: Petronski
How much money would it take for you to let her die? Well said.
To: Petronski
> if the decision was yours, how much would you have to be paid to let her die?
Insufficient data to answer your question. In this hypothetical, is she my daughter? Is the taxpayer getting soaked? In that case, likely you'd have to pay me a *lot*. Because it would cost me nothing to maintain my daughter.
If I was just some disinterested judge of some kind? I'd want to know more about her condition. Is she actually in there? Is there consciousness? Intelligence? Does she really, honestly have a chance for life, or is she just goign to remain a small organic nugget in a very large hunk of medical technology?
9
posted on
10/17/2006 11:13:25 AM PDT
by
orionblamblam
(Prayers... give people the feeling they're doing something without making any real effort.)
To: the invisib1e hand
For some people, that price is pretty damn low.
10
posted on
10/17/2006 11:16:05 AM PDT
by
Petronski
(Living His life abundantly.)
To: orionblamblam
As a sideshow to this story - the "parents" who claimed to have such an interest in the child's survival now both basically disclaim the child - wanting the system to take the child in.
Motives are a funny thing. I wonder if the parents expected a financial windfall from the whole thing (like maybe people would donate tons of money)?
11
posted on
10/17/2006 11:16:48 AM PDT
by
TheBattman
(I've got TWO QUESTIONS for you....)
To: Petronski
Question: how much of my money would you spend to keep her alive?
12
posted on
10/17/2006 11:19:09 AM PDT
by
orionblamblam
(Prayers... give people the feeling they're doing something without making any real effort.)
To: orionblamblam
13
posted on
10/17/2006 11:21:30 AM PDT
by
Lesforlife
("For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb . . ." Psalm 139:13)
To: orionblamblam
I think many of the "right-to-life" folks also would eliminate any government spending thus translating into no problem for the incredibly rich, and no life for the average folk.
If there were no NHS in England the baby would not have survived this long.
To: orionblamblam
***Both parents live on state benefits****
Pay for the child--cut off the parents.
15
posted on
10/17/2006 11:25:54 AM PDT
by
sgtbono2002
(The fourth estate is a fifth column.)
To: orionblamblam
Here's my two cents. Let me start off by saying I'm not sure how much a taxpayer should pay. As a conservative I hate to spend money on anything, but how do you put a price limit on life? It is an interesting quandary to say the least.
I'd been following this story since a year ago and I admittedly know very little about the situation. However, from what I do know or thought I knew, there seems to be some inconsistencies between what I thought I had learned and what this article reports. I first learned of this situation when the British doctors/hospital had stated that they would not resuscitate baby Charlotte again, despite her parents' wanting her to be resuscitated. The parents took the case to the courts and lost, and from what I had understood the parents were trying to bring her home so that they could care for her and contrary to the statements of this article, the parents seemed pretty involved in Charlotte's life, though the television program I watched was no champion of baby Charlotte as constant comparisons were made to the Terri Schiavo case, and conclusions drawn about quality of life, as well as commenting on the strain on the parent's marriage. It was my understanding that from the program and the small bits and pieces I read after watching the program that the father had lost his job because of the situation (he missed a lot of work to be at the hospital and such) and that is where their financial troubles began. I believe it was an episode of 48 hours or Primetime that first sparked my interest. After the court case, it seemed that this situation had died down in the media.
Now it seems that the parents are being painted in a much less caring light. I seem somewhat confused about their motivations if they are infrequent visitors, and I had thought they had moved her from a hospital to a facility of some sort to "rehabilitate" her so she could come home.
I guess none of this is important, it just made me wonder what was really going on.
16
posted on
10/17/2006 11:26:59 AM PDT
by
IMissPresidentReagan
("My Friends we did it....we made a difference. ...All in all not bad, not bad at all." Pres. Reagan)
To: orionblamblam
As much as it takes, either play with your toys or quit collecting them.
17
posted on
10/17/2006 11:28:41 AM PDT
by
Old Professer
(The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
To: Lesforlife
I was curious if that may play a role in how the parents were being portrayed, as this article cast quite a different light on them than other pieces I had seen and read previously.
18
posted on
10/17/2006 11:29:21 AM PDT
by
IMissPresidentReagan
("My Friends we did it....we made a difference. ...All in all not bad, not bad at all." Pres. Reagan)
To: orionblamblam
19
posted on
10/17/2006 11:29:42 AM PDT
by
Old Professer
(The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
To: orionblamblam
Question: how much of my money would you spend to keep her aliveobfuscation-of-the-year candidate.
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