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Issue
Date: March 26, 2004
U.S.
ethicists counter Vatican view
Artificial
hydration, feeding: normal or extraordinary care?
By ARTHUR JONES
A statement
circulating for signatures among U.S Catholic health care
ethicists forcefully disagrees with a Vatican official’s March
16 opinion that artificial hydration and nutrition for patients
in a “persistent vegetative state” is “simply care,” and
not medical intervention.
Bishop Elio Sgreccia,
vice president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, made the
claim at a news conference prior to the March 17-20 congress of
the World Federation of Catholic Medical Associations, a
gathering of 350 physicians and medical ethicists in Rome.
The view advanced by
Sgreccia is “irresponsible” and flies in the face of “the
many statements to the contrary offered by medical societies,
individual bishops and conferences of bishops,” said the U.S.
statement, written by Dominican Fr. Kevin O’Rourke, professor
at the Neiswanger Institute of Ethics and Public Policy and the
Stritch School of Medicine at Loyola University, Chicago.
His statement was
prepared prior to a Las Vegas meeting of Catholic Health
Association ethicists March 24-26.
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The Rome congress on
“Life-Sustaining Treatments and the Vegetative State:
Scientific Advances and Ethical Dilemmas,” however, echoed
Sgreccia’s stance on its opening day when Eugene F. Diamond,
director of the Catholic Medical Association’s Linacre
Institute, also said that the provision of nutrition and
hydration through tubes was not “extraordinary” intervention
but obligatory care.
The Sgreccia-Diamond
viewpoint is not one that would be accepted by a significant
majority of U.S. Catholic ethicists, James J. Walter, O’Malley
professor of bioethics at Loyola Marymount University, Los
Angeles, told NCR.
“We normally
understand ‘care,’ ” he said, “to mean washing the
patient’s body, turning the patient so they don’t get
decubidi [bedsores], things of that sort, and you could include
providing a tray of food to a patient.
“But when you start
artificially delivering this,” said Walter, “it is now a
matter of treatment. And I think that’s been the point with
many Catholic ethicists from the beginning: that this is
artificially delivered.”
Walter considers the
Sgreccia-Diamond view “an attempt to reshuffle the deck with
the artificial hydration-nutrition and put it into another
category, to pull things back.” He said he suspects that the
Schiavo case in Florida has provoked anew this latest
examination because the family is Catholic, because politicians
have become involved, and “possibly someone from that area has
written to Rome wanting a clarification.”
Terri Schiavo has been
in a persistent vegetative state since suffering heart failure
in 1990 when she was 26. Her husband, Michael Schiavo, said his
wife would not want to be kept alive in this state. Her parents,
Bob and Mary Schindler, insist their daughter responds to them
and could improve. It took action by the Florida state
legislature and an order from Florida Gov. Jeb Bush to have
Schiavo’s withdrawn feeding tube reinserted in October 2003.
As if in anticipation
of the Rome gathering, the Catholic Health Association organized
a March 10 members’ audio conference on Schiavo and artificial
nutrition and hydration in Catholic hospitals.
Walter said there are
inconsistencies in the current “Ethical and Religious
Directives for Catholic Health Care Services.” In
fact, he said, “they probably establish two different
standards. The introduction to Part 5 said AHN [artificial
delivery] could be discontinued if the patient is imminently
dying or if the patient cannot assimilate the nutrition and
hydration. Article 58 says there’s a presumption to favor
providing nutrition and hydration, and decisions to withdraw
that can be done on the basis that there’s not sufficient
benefit to outweigh the burdens to the patient.”
Walter’s expectation
is that “the Pontifical Academy for Life is likely to go in
the direction of the most conservative, protective
interpretation of the traditional ordinary/extraordinary
means.”
(The “ordinary”
means “care” that offers some hope of benefit and no
excessive burden; “extraordinary” does not offer hope of
benefit or imposes an excessive burden.)
The O’Rourke
statement “observations” on Sgreccia’s remarks included:
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For Sgreccia “to
infer that medical personnel, families or [persistent
vegetative state] patients, theologians and medical
ethicists who approve the withdrawal of AHN from PVS
patients are ‘proponents of euthanasia’ is simply an
insult.”
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“The tradition
of Catholic theologians in regard to removing life support
has been confirmed by Pope Pius XII (1957), the Congregation
for Doctrine of the Faith (1980) and Pope John Paul II
(1995)
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Such confirmation
assures “us that life support may be withdrawn if it does
not offer hope of benefit or imposes an excessive burden.
The decision concerning hope of benefit is to be made by the
patient or the patient’s proxy. A representative of the
church may offer guidance, but should not preempt the right
of patient or proxy.
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“[For Bishop
Sgreccia] to present a private theological opinion as
‘Catholic teaching’ borders on presumption. The
magisterium has never maintained that prolonging the life of
a patient in PVS ‘is beneficial to the patient.’ ”
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“Finally,
Catholic health care professionals, theologians and health
care ethicists who are convinced that AHN for PVS patients
is a medical treatment and offers no hope of benefit or
imposes an excessive burden, do not maintain that the
‘patient ceases to be a person.’ Rather, they maintain
that the PVS patient is still a person, but a person for
whom there is no moral mandate to prolong life.”
O’Rourke, who said
this has been an ongoing dispute since the beginning of the
1990s, told NCR this was a Vatican effort to “ ‘close
the door.’ But there are enough statements from U.S. bishops
to make the Vatican hesitant, he said, including one by 13 Texas
bishops in favor of the idea that artificial hydration and
nutrition can be removed, and a recently issued statement by
Illinois bishops that allows for AHN withdrawal when it is not
beneficial for the patient.”
The issue, he said,
also comes down to the fact that the rulings by groups such as
the Texas and Illinois bishops “are appreciated by people
who’ve worked in the hospitals wards. To my mind there are
people, and Bishop Sgreccia is one of them, who haven’t worked
in hospitals wards with the people, the lay people who have to
make these decisions.”
Sources
for this article included NCR’s Rome bureau and
Catholic News Service.
Arthur
Jones is NCR editor at large. His e-mail address is arthurjones@comcast.net.
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For
more information
For
the Illinois bishops’ statement, “Facing the End of
Life,” call (312) 368-0011. “The Ethical and Religious
Directives for Catholic Health Care Services” is
available from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
publications department, (202) 541-3000, or read on http://www.nccbuscc.org/bishops/directives.htm.
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National
Catholic Reporter, March 26, 2004
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