Voluntary End-of-Life Measures Banned at Catholic Hospitals
By PAULA SPAN - THE NEW YORK TIMES
Added: Thu, 11 Mar 2010 00:00:00 UTC
Thanks to Just Plain Cliff for the link
Original link
In the book I discussed last week, Zoe FitzGerald Carterâs âImperfect Endings,â a woman growing increasingly incapacitated from Parkinsonâs disease deliberately stops eating and drinking so she can die in her home with her children and grandchildren nearby. Itâs a controversial decision, both within her own family and in the society at large, but itâs a legal one — and a personal one that doesnât require any bureaucracyâs blessing.
Where the picture grows murkier is in institutions like hospitals and nursing homes, which have their own formal policies and informal routines about treatment at the end of life and how much weight a patientâs expressed desires carry. Weâve all heard bitter tales of advance directives sometimes being ignored and overridden, of family members having to fight to have their loved onesâ final wishes honored.
In the 600 Catholic hospitals and hundreds of Catholic nursing homes around the country, such issues may grow more contentious in the wake of a new directive adopted by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.
As Harris Meyer recently reported in Kaiser Health News, the directive establishes âan obligation to provide patients with food and water, including medically assisted nutrition and hydrationâ for those who canât eat or drink, and it specifically includes patients in âchronic and presumably irreversible conditions.â
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