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Please also see our home page for more up-to-date information. By
Dr Peggy Norris, Chairman of ALERT, Against Legalised Euthanasia - Research and
Teaching A CASE AGAINST
THE LIVING WILL
The
words "Living Will" would appear to be a contradiction in terms, as
Wills are normally associated with administering the estate of a person who has
died. The law is particularly careful to ensure a Will is valid, i.e. that no
undue pressure was brought to bear on the testator, and only then is probate
granted and the deceased person's wishes carried out. Living Wills or Advance
Directives, on the other hand, are designed to be implemented while a person is
still alive but unable to communicate his/her wishes to the attending doctor,
and no one is required to check whether the patient was fully informed of the
consequences of signing. THE BALANCE OF
POWER
Wesley
J. Smith, a U.S. consumer advocate, author of "The Senior Citizen's
Handbook": noted in the Wall Street journal on May 4th 1994 that the Living
Will "changes the balance of power." "Once a Living Will is
signed, the patient gives up the protections of informed consent, leaving all
health care decisions in the hands of the medical profession. The power to
decide whether the time has come for the Living Will to go into effect belongs
to the doctor, as does the power to decide the type and extent of medical
intervention that is to be withheld. And this power is not restricted to
'extraordinary care,' such as ventilators to assist with breathing, but to any
medical intervention - from not treating a curable bacterial infection to
withdrawing food and fluids so that the patient starves and dehydrates to
death." The
patient is no longer in control, yet the assumption on which people are invited
and indeed encouraged to sign is that such a document ensures the signer's
autonomy. The reverse is the case. The purpose it serves is twofold. When a
patient cannot communicate it enables a doctor to hasten death whilst
prohibiting him or her from using any clinical expertise to try to restore
health or well-being. At the same time it absolves the doctor from legal
responsibility for the patient's premature death. EUTHANASIA
The
idea was launched in the U.S.A. in 1969 by a law journal article entitled
"Due Process of Euthanasia: the Living Will, a Proposal." (In Britain
the Voluntary Euthanasia Society is the main distributor of Wills/Directives).
The proposal soon found favour with U.S. government officials as an economy
measure. The leaked "Derzon memorandum" advised President Carter to
"Change social values regarding cost-inducing activities" and stated
"The cost-saving from a nation-wide push toward 'Living Wills' is likely to
be enormous. Over one-fifth of Medicare expenditures are for persons in their
last year of life." But it was not until 1991 that it was made compulsory
for all patients admitted to hospital in the U.S., for whatever reason, to be
presented with "Living Will" forms. In
Britain's hard-up Health Service, there is little danger of incompetent patients
being expensively over-treated and forbidden to die, supposing that could be
done. To guard against "officious" treatment, members of the public
should not have to sign their lives away. Instead the public should insist that
doctors uphold professional standards of care. MISINTERPRETATION
Can
Living Wills be misinterpreted? I quote Wesley Smith again: "There
is a growing body of evidence that living wills are being misapplied so as to
deny care to people with treatable medical conditions. For example, there is the
tragic case of the 73-year-old woman in the Midwest who, upon entering a
hospital for hip replacement surgery was given a living will to sign along with
other admission forms. She tolerated the surgery well and was on the road to
recovery. Then, she suffered a cardiac arrest. "Rather
than attempt to save her (remember, the woman was not otherwise terminally ill),
it was assumed that because she had signed a living will she wanted to die if
faced with a grave medical condition. Thus, the woman was given no medical
assistance whatsoever and died - a process that took some 20 minutes. The
woman's daughter was not even notified of the problem nor asked for permission
to 'do nothing.' The first the daughter found out about the crisis was when she
was informed of her mother's passing." Lord
McColl, a senior surgeon at Guy's Hospital, said in the House of Lords debate on
May 9th on the Report of the Select Committee on Medical Ethics: "I
have some anxiety over directives produced by the Voluntary Euthanasia Society
which contain in them a refusal to take food and water by so-called artificial
means. If such directives are legally binding upon a doctor, then we may see
cases in hospital of patients dying through lack of food and water, perhaps
patients with P.V.S., motor neurone disease or Alzheimer's ... advance
directives could become the back door for euthanasia, for some would consider it
more humane to kill than allow patients to die through lack of food or
water" POWER TO THE
PAST
An
Advance Directive gives power to the past. It sets the young person you once
were, with an instinctive horror of old age and disability, against the old
person you become, and makes the earlier judgement binding on you. Doctor
magazine on 2nd December 1993 reported: "A study by the Imperial Cancer
Research Fund three years ago showed that more than one in two cancer patients
would accept any drug treatment, no matter how severe the side effects, if there
was even a one per cent chance of cure. But this enthusiasm was not shared by a
matched sample of healthy patients. Only one in five of these said they would
subject themselves to toxic treatments." At least cancer patients would be
able to tear up their Living Wills. Victims of stroke or cardiac arrest would
not. The
Euthanasia movement has done a brilliant job in persuading unwary people to sign
orders for their own future deaths, which must be carried out, whether their own
doctor is willing or no, when they can no longer countermand them. The ideal of
physical perfection is served by Living Wills; but that of a humane society is
not. Published
in "EAGLE" Aug/Sept 1994, and reproduced with permission. Note
by ALERT 1997; Fightback by some doctors has now made it less certain that
Living Wills are legally binding, when it is obvious that the patient did not
clearly foresee his present condition. They are still dangerous. |