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When Should Treatment be Stopped?
BBC News, UK Edition ^ | Oct. 7th, 204 | unknown

Posted on 10/08/2004 1:07:10 PM PDT by planekT

When should treatment be stopped?

Doctors can refuse to treat patients if they feel it serves no purpose The Charlotte Wyatt case has triggered a debate about how long doctors should keep treating patients when they are seriously ill.

A High Court judge has ruled in favour of doctors who argued the premature 11-month-old girl's quality of life would be so poor that she should not be resuscitated if she stops breathing.

Her parents had appealed to Mr Justice Hedley during the two-day hearing last week that everything should be done for her as she was a "fighter".

But doctors told the court her life would be dominated by pain if she kept being treated.

This is the first time a case like this has been held in an open court.

And with medical advances being made all the time, doctors are facing the difficult question about whether it is right to stop treating desperately ill people.

Richard Nicholson, editor of the Bulletin of Medical Ethics, told BBC News Online that during the 1980s and 1990s there was almost a competition among doctors to keep premature babies alive.

Constant pain

"One of the substantial side effects of medical advancements is that we can keep the body alive almost regardless of how severely damaged it has become."

And he acknowledged the same sort of issues were cropping up in the treatment of elderly and terminally ill patients.

Dr Sarah Jarvis, a GP who has seen a number of cases where people are suffering and in constant pain, told BBC Five Live society was struggling to keep up with science.

We probably do not know enough about the doctors intentions to know whether it is a case of euthanasia or not

Anthony McCarthy, of the Linacre Centre

"We have to remember 10 years ago there would have been virtually no prospect of a baby born at this stage surviving.

"The problem is medical advances are galloping ahead so fast that we have reached the stage where we are keeping babies alive when perhaps 50% are going to have profound neurological difficulties."

But she insists the Charlotte case was different from the debate about euthanasia.

"Euthanasia is actively helping to end someone's life and that is illegal in this country.

"There is a big difference between that and not resuscitating."

Others remain less convinced.

Debate

Anthony McCarthy, from the Linacre Centre, a health care ethics organisation linked to the Catholic Church, said: "We probably do not know enough about the doctors intentions to know whether it is a case of euthanasia or not."

He also believes the case has opened up the debate about whether parents or doctors should have the final say on treatment.

"Parents should have the first say but parents are not always infallible.

"It is possible that parents may want to continue treatment that may be burdensome."

Doctors have the right to refuse to treat a patient if they feel it is in the person's best interests - although if the patient's family disagree the case can end up in court.

Dr Michael Wilks, of the British Medical Association's ethics committee, said the decision is taken if the treatment serves no purpose or if the quality of life is deemed to be so low that it is not beneficial.

He said: "A doctor's job is to make clinical judgements about whether treatment is appropriate or not. If it is not appropriate it should be withdrawn."

And he said while it was difficult, the public should also consider the wider implications of giving treatment.

"Every time we give unnecessary treatment we spend NHS resources and deprive someone else of these resources."


TOPICS: Government; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: courtdecision; healthcare; medical; prolife; socializedmedicine
A disturbing development. This is one reason why you don't want socialized medicine.
1 posted on 10/08/2004 1:07:10 PM PDT by planekT
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To: planekT
Just a side note for people:

If you want to stop this or something similar from happening to you, please fill out a living and regular will.

I have brain cancer, so just in case I fill mine out, so that no doctor or anyone else can make that decision for me, I already have.

Sorry for the morbidity.
2 posted on 10/08/2004 1:11:45 PM PDT by DSBull (Truth is the light of the World, shine it everywhere)
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To: DSBull

But, that's the most disturbing point of the decision, that even beyond the wishes of the patient (in this case surrogately through her parents), the doctors made the decision to not resuscitate.


3 posted on 10/08/2004 1:16:47 PM PDT by mikemoose
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To: mikemoose

My wife sent me this link from work (she's a medical professional) and she was very disturbed.


4 posted on 10/08/2004 1:21:05 PM PDT by planekT
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To: mikemoose

She had the legal document? well if so it would not surprise me.. socialists always think think they know better.


5 posted on 10/08/2004 1:21:35 PM PDT by DSBull (Truth is the light of the World, shine it everywhere)
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To: planekT

If the parents truly want treatment continued, they should go off the taxpayer-funded Naational Health Service and put the child in a private hospital with doctors they pay for themselves.


6 posted on 10/08/2004 1:25:42 PM PDT by expatpat
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To: expatpat

And I do hope that they will be able to do that. But that doesn't address the disturbing point that it was not the bean counters but the doctors that wanted to let her die.


7 posted on 10/08/2004 1:29:21 PM PDT by mikemoose
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To: planekT
http://www.internationaltaskforce.org/

A very good, very pro-life, Anti-Euthanasia Group to go to for paper work to draw up legal documents so your life is NOT ended before you intended it be.
8 posted on 10/08/2004 1:55:58 PM PDT by Esther Ruth (Now is THE time for all good men to turn Off CBS, NBC, ABC)
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To: mikemoose

The NHS in England is, I believe, in such poor shape that people who need elective surgery have to wait 3-4 months to get it done. The doctors probably hate to see badly-needed resources going to a dead end when so many other people need attention. I know it's harsh, but so is triage in battlefield conditions.


9 posted on 10/08/2004 2:26:25 PM PDT by expatpat
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