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Ethics at the End of Life: Assisted Death

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Title: Ethics at the End of Life: Assisted Death


1
Ethics at the End of Life Assisted Death
  • ISD II
  • Andrew Latus
  • June 18, 2003

2
Outline
  • End of Life Issues
  • Advance Health Care Directives
  • Euthanasia

3
End of Life Issues
  • Discussions of ethics at the end of life
    generally focus primarily on the dramatic
    issues of euthanasia and assisted suicide
  • Today will be no exception
  • However, this leaves out ethical issues you may
    encounter more frequently as physicians

4
Patients Perspectives
  • Singer et al (1999) report the following end of
    life issues as being of most concern to a group
    of patients surveyed
  • Receiving Adequate Pain Symptom Management
  • I wouldnt want a lot of pain its one of the
    worst ways to go
  • 4 out of 10 dying patients had severe pain most
    of the time?

5
Patients Perspectives
  • 2. Avoiding Inappropriate Prolongation of Dying
  • I wouldnt want life supports if Im going to
    die anyway.
  • 78 of health care professionals surveyed thought
    the treatments they offered were too burdensome?
  • Problem of getting info about specific
    treatments, but not the big picture
  • Role of the physician in giving a realistic
    picture
  • 3. Control Over End of Life Decisions
  • Its very, very important to me that I can make
    choices for myself.
  • More about big picture decisions than narrow
    specific decisions about treatment?

6
Patients Perspectives
  • 4. Being a Burden on Loved Ones
  • Making substitute decisions
  • Witnessing their death
  • Providing care
  • 5. Involvement of Loved Ones
  • Considering an advance directive helped me get
    closer to my family There were so many times I
    wanted to get their opinion on certain things

7
Advance Health Care Directives
  • See material from Geriatrics session
  • Notice that many of the issues mentioned by the
    patients could be at least partially dealt with
    via an Advance Health Care Directive
  • Caution Dont overestimate the usefulness of an
    AHCD for matters other than identifying a
    decision maker. Its hard to anticipate all
    eventualities.

8
Euthanasia
  • A broad range of activities are sometimes
    classified as euthanasia
  • Withholding treatment
  • Withdrawing treatment
  • Taking action to end someones life
  • Providing someone with the means to end his/her
    life
  • What all of them have in common is that they
    involve situations in which
  • Someone, perhaps the patient, deems it better
    that the person we are concerned with dies than
    that efforts to treat the patient continue and
  • Some course of action or inaction is undertaken
    with the understanding that it will bring about
    the death of the person

9
Is Euthanasia Ever Morally OK?
  • If we give the term a broad reading, most people
    will answer yes.
  • E.g., Suppose Tom has terminal cancer and that
    all conventional treatments have failed.
  • Left untreated, he will die in a few days.
  • However, there is an experimental drug that has
    shown some promise in treating cancers like his,
    but that also has some very unpleasant side
    effects.
  • Few would argue that it is immoral if Toms
    doctors accept his wish to refuse taking part in
    this experiment.
  • The question thus becomes under what conditions
    is euthanasia morally acceptable?

10
Some Distinctions
  • Discussion of particular cases often turns on the
    type of euthanasia involved
  • Assisted Suicide
  • Voluntary vs. Non-voluntary Euthanasia
  • Active vs. Passive Euthanasia

11
Assisted Suicide
  • Not actually euthanasia, since the 'patient'
    ultimately kills himself or herself.
  • The line between the two can, however, become
    very thin.  
  • e.g., Dr. Jack Kevorkian's 'Mercitron'  
  • Many of the same issues arise in considering
    assisted suicide as in considering euthanasia
  • Remaining focus will be on euthanasia

12
Voluntary vs. Non-voluntary Euthanasia
  • Voluntary - killing or letting die a competent
    person who has expressed a desire for this
    (usually over a sustained period of time).
  • Non-voluntary - killing or letting die when the
    patient is unable to express such a desire
  • Note there is a difference between involuntary
    and non-voluntary
  • Involuntary euthanasia is not a seriously
    considered possibility

13
Active vs. Passive Euthanasia
  • Active - roughly, involves killing a patient
  • E.g., administering a fatal dose of morphine to a
    terminally ill cancer patient
  • This is often what people have in mind when they
    simply speak of euthanasia
  • Be careful to distinguish killing from murdering
    (wrongful killing) not all killings are
    murders
  • Passive - roughly, involves letting a patient die
  • E.g., failing to revive a patient who has signed
    a DNR order
  • Generally, passive euthanasia is looked upon more
    favorably than active euthanasia

14
Forms of Euthanasia
  • The distinctions may be combined
  • Voluntary passive euthanasia (VPE)
  • Voluntary active euthanasia (VAE)
  • Non-voluntary passive euthanasia (NPE)
  • Non-voluntary active euthanasia (NAE)
  • VPE is the least controversial form of
    euthanasia 
  • a competent patient has a right to refuse
    treatment

15
Forms of Euthanasia
  • NPE is now broadly accepted in at least some
    situations (e.g., a neonate with almost certainly
    fatal birth defects)
  • There are limits, however, e.g., in the Stephen
    Dawson case, S.D.s parents were not allowed to
    refuse lifesaving treatment even though they felt
    S.D. would be better off dead
  • Any form of active euthanasia is much more
    controversial, so we will examine the
    active/passive distinction more closely

16
Two Kinds of Passive Euthanasia
  • (i) Withholding of Treatment e.g., not performing
    a needed surgery or not administering a needed
    drug
  • (ii) Withdrawing of Treatment e.g., turning off a
    respirator
  • Question  While i above seems clearly passive,
    why is withdrawing of treatment passive?
  • Rachels "what is the cessation of treatment ...
    if it is not 'the intentional termination of the
    life of one human being by another'?" (pp. 79-80)

17
Karen Quinlan
  • 1975 - Quinlan goes into a drug induced coma
  • Suffers anoxia causing irreversible brain damage
  • Required a ventilator to live
  • Not brain dead, but in a persistent vegetative
    state
  • Quinlans sister - "If Karen could ever see
    herself like this, it would be the worst thing in
    the world for her."
  • Hospital - '1 in a million' chance of recovery
  • Family sought to have her removed from the
    respirator, doctors hospital refused

18
Why Was the Cruzan Case Controversial?
  • AMA Declaration (1973)
  • The intentional termination of the life of one
    human being by another is contrary to that for
    which the medical profession stands
  • The cessation of the employment of
    extraordinary means to prolong the life of the
    body when there is irrefutable evidence that
    biological death is imminent is the decision of
    the patient and/or his immediate family.
    (Rachels, 78)
  • Note the word extraordinary
  • In 1975, the AMA did not draw a clear distinction
    between withdrawing treatment and active
    euthanasia
  • In 1986, the AMA adopted a policy which clearly
    drew this distinction
  • CMA Code 17. Ascertain wherever possible and
    recognize your patients wishes about the
    initiation, continuation and cessation of
    life-sustaining treatment.

19
The Outcome
  • 1976 - N.J. Supreme Court overturns a lower court
    decision and rules in favour of the Quinlans.
  • Doctors 'weaned' her off the respirator in a
    successful attempt to keep her alive.
  • Died of pneumonia - June 13, 1986
  • This case reminds us that standards regarding
    ethical matters can change very quickly.
  • The Karen Quinlan case would be much less
    controversial today.
  • Is the lesson of the case that the line between
    active and passive euthanasia is uninteresting
    morally speaking?

20
Rachels on Active vs. Passive Euthanasia
  • Rachels Active euthanasia is not necessarily
    worse than passive euthanasia
  • Objection Killing is worse than letting die!
  • Response  Rachels claims that we have been
    misled by the fact that most actual cases of
    killing are morally worse than most actual cases
    of letting die
  • Because of this, we have mistakenly concluded
    there is some deep moral difference between
    killing letting die.

21
Cases
  • (i) A unconscious patient will almost certainly
    die unless paced on a respirator. His family
    explain he has expressed a clear desire not to be
    placed on one. He is treated according to those
    wishes and dies.
  • (ii) Case i, but the man is placed on the
    respirator before his family arrive. After his
    wishes are explained, he is removed from the
    respirator and dies.  
  • Are these cases of killing or letting die?
  • Are these cases morally different?

22
Cases
  • (1) A man drowns his young cousin so that he
    won't have to split an inheritance with him.
  • (2) Case 1, except, before he can kill him, the
    cousin slips and falls face down in the bathtub.
    The man just has to watch his cousin drown.  
  • Are these cases of killing or letting die?
  • Are these cases morally different?

23
Cases
  • (a) In accordance with an ALS patient's wishes
    the doctors remove her from her respirator. She
    dies.
  • (b) A greedy son removes an ALS patient from her
    respirator because he wants to collect his
    inheritance. She dies.
  • Are these cases of killing or letting die?
  • Are these cases morally different?

24
Is Rachels Right?
  • Do the cases make a convincing argument that the
    difference between active and passive euthanasia
    is morally irrelevant?
  • If so, then what is morally relevant?

25
The Law
  • Very roughly, the following summarizes the
    Canadian legal situation re. euthanasia
  • voluntary passive euthanasia legal
  • in fact, required no consent, no treatment
  • voluntary active euthanasia illegal
  • although see The Doctrine of Double Effect
  • not true in all countries (e.g., Netherlands
    since 2001)
  • non-voluntary passive euthanasia legal
  • under appropriate proxy decision only
  • non-voluntary active euthanasia illegal
  • although again see The Doctrine of Double
    Effect
  • assisted suicide illegal
  • not true in all countries, e.g., Oregons Death
    with Dignity Act

26
A Closing Issue The Doctrine of Double Effect
(DDE)
  • Suppose an action (e.g., giving a terminally ill
    cancer patient morphine) has some reasonably
    foreseeable result (e.g., quickening the
    patients death) and that it would be
    unacceptable to perform this action for the
    purpose of bringing this result about.
  • The DDE claims that it may still be acceptable to
    perform this action, provided that the action is
    not performed for the purpose of bringing this
    result about.
  • E.g., it may still be acceptable to give the
    patient the morphine provided that it is given in
    order to control his pain, not to hasten the
    patients death
  • The DDE is commonly, if not explicitly, appealed
    to in practice.
  • As a result, VAE NAE may sometimes be
    practiced.

27
The DDE in Practice
  • Doctors should feel comfortable giving as much
    pain medication as it takes to ease suffering,
    even if it hastens death The key is a doctors
    intent when giving drugs.
  • (CBC story on consensus guidelines re. palliative
    care and analgesia, 2002)
  • Does the DDE make theoretical sense?
  • Does the DDE make practical sense?
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