Futile treatment should be
discontinued. Chemotherapy and life-support are overused in the
USA, sometimes with financial motives, and can give people awful
deaths.
Hydration and food like glucose
to keep a body ticking over, however administered, should not
be classed as medical treatment. They should never be discontinued
or denied with the intention of ending a patients life.
When someone is definitely
dying, artificial hydration pushes them into heart failure, makes
them wet the bed, drool on the pillow and get a death rattle
which is awful for relatives. Hospice doctors and geriatricians
have a horror of a law which would oblige them to do this.
The solution is to record in
the patients notes that hydration is being stopped because
the patient is now dying. The Profession should be told to prepare
clear guidelines to help doctors decide when that time has arrived.
Of course there will be mistaken decisions occasionally. Of course
an element of trust in the Profession has to be present. Of course
ill-will will occasionally produce a doctor who abuses the trust.
Clearly a person with a possibly-reversible
coma is not to be classed as dying. Professional guidelines are
well-known, and try to make the most accurate prediction possible.
Equally clearly, anyone who is at all responsive must be given
fluid to avoid suffering, by mouth if possible.
We need a definite statement
of good-will from the Government which says that measures intended
to hasten a patients death are never acceptable, and shortage
of resources can simply never be cited as a reason for such decisions.
10th March
2005
Dr.
Richard Lamerton
Medical Director
Hospice of the Valleys,
South Wales
Published by ALERT 27 Walpole Street, London SW3 4QS. Telephone
020 7730 730 2800. Fax 020 7730 0181.