Posted on 03/21/2009 1:24:43 PM PDT by wagglebee
According to a new study, terminally ill cancer patients who drew comfort from religion dont want to die if they dont have to. Well, no surprise. But, says the Times, theyre less eager to die than people who dont draw comfort from religion.
Well thats interesting, perhaps, but there is a more important as well as more troubling aspect to the story thats going unnoticed.
The study appears in the most recent issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Researchers from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston used questionnaires and interviews to assess the level of reliance on religious faith for comfort of 345 terminally ill patients.
The vast majority of the patientssome 90 percent of those who were religious and 97 percent of those who were notdid not want heroic measures, such as mechanical ventilators or CPR, to be used in their cases.
Based on that seven percentage-point difference the New York Times proclaimed Religious Belief Linked to Desire for Aggressive Treatment in Terminal Patients. Please.
Do a little more math and you will realize that sweeping generalizations like far more likely to seek aggressive, life-prolonging care are based on the responses of approximately 25 people.
The researchers acknowledged that the study didnt explore why this small handful of religious patients sought extensive end-of-life care. That didnt stop them from speculating anyway. One of the studys authors disabused Times readers of the idea that spiritual patients are more likely to say their lives are in Gods hands.
Instead, she told the Times, to religious people, life is sacred and sanctified . . . they feel its their duty and obligation to stay alive as long as possible.
That has it backwards. If 90 percent of the religious people in the study refused heroic measures, then its more accurate to say that they dont feel such an obligationpossibly because they believe that their lives are in Gods hands.
If all that was going on here was yet another mis-characterization of the faithful, it wouldnt matter. But the Times let its readers know why they should care: cost.
The Times noted that Medicare spends about one-third of its budget on people who are in the last year of life, and much of that on patients at the very end of life. The study noted that the religious patients were less likely to have completed advance medical directives, such as a living will or do-not-resuscitate order.
Anything, including religious belief, that might motivate people to seek aggressive treatment toward the end of life, costs money. Ominously, Wesley J. Smith has documented the growing utilitarian emphasis in medicine, in which saving money increasingly takes precedence over doing right by suffering patients.
Little wonder, then, that what amounts to a statistical blip becomes the stuff of headlines. Religion can be a problem if it makes people want to stay alive longer. As we nationalize healthcare, as Smith warns, the sick and infirm will soon be told they should do the patriotic thing: go quietly.
The "duty to die" is fast becoming a reality.
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So, more than three decades of atoning for his past isn’t enough for you?
I suppose you reject the New Testament because well over half of it was written by a man who persecuted Christians?
Yes, he has done good works, but that does not mean that he is no longer a convicted felon.
What PRECISELY does his status as a convicted felon have to do with what he writes?
“What PRECISELY does his status as a convicted felon have to do with what he writes?”
Everything. If he had not been convicted in court, chances are he would never have been convicted in his heart.
What the crap is your problem with Chuck? Let’s hear it.
That was not exactly what I was referring to, but you make an excellent point. Though, Colson's conversion began before he was convicted and it was his faith that lead him to plead guilty.
Judgemental a**hat ping.
Go spill your drivel on DU.
Nothing at all, but he one can not scrub the taint of being a convicted felon from one’s biography.
“Nothing at all, but he one can ..”
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Answer this if you can.
If it has nothing to do at all with what he writes; then why bring it up?
I don’t think Colson feels the slightest bit tainted by the classification. Can you tell me a single thing that Colson is unable to do because of his past conviction?
“..and it was his faith that lead him to plead guilty.”
Thank you for that chrono. My memory is fuzzy on it (as with most things!), but I recall his telling of how he was in his car after talking with a friend and coming to his born again moment. I guess sitting in his own car would be hard to do if he had already been convicted!
Here is Chuck Colson’s biography from BreakPoint/Prison Fellowship:
http://www.breakpoint.org/Bio.asp?ID=211
Well then, if it does not bother him, it should not bother you and the fact of his felon status should not be scrubbed from the first paragraph of his biography.
If you’re an atheist, what’s the point in struggling? Might as well get it over with and croak sooner rather than later. There’s no hope and nothing really matters anyway, so why endure?
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