ARCHIVES U.P.E. 1. Volume 7 Number 14 E : lz ~~ The Student Voice of University of Prince Edward Island Thursday, November 23, 1989 Should Doctors Force Patients To Live? by Robert Hercz Canadian University Press _ In a university philosophy class, a videotape is being screened. Donald C., a 26-year- old burn victim, is explaining to a psychiatrist that he wants to be discharged from hospital. Donald is a mess. Most of his body is covered in raw scar tis- sue from third-degree burns. He looks more like the monstrous product of a Hollywood special- effects department than a human being. He is blind, he cannot walk, his hands are useless stubs. He is in excruciating pain. To control infection, he has to be lowered, naked, into a tank of dis- infectant every day. As Donald talks, the tape shows scenes from his daily existence. Some of the students cannot watch the tape. They are looking out the window or down at their shoes. Some of the students want to be doctors. If Donald is released from hos- pital, he would soon die of over- whelming infection, which is ex- actly what he wants. He makes a clear, strong, and impassioned plea: “What gives a physician the tight to keep alive a patient who wants to die?” But, back in 1974, no doctor would sign his release. The case of Donald C. is: an- cient history in bioethics. It is an early example of the technologi- cal roots of many of these ethi- cal dilemmas. If.Donald had been burned only a few years earlier, the problem never would have arisen: he would simply have died. “We are now able to do things in medicine that we weren’t able to do five, 10, 15 years ago,” says Toronto’s Eric Meslin, one of a small handful of professional hos- pital ethicists in Canada. “We can keep patients alive virtually indefinitely on sophisticated res- pirators and ventilators and more powerful drugs. We’re now look- ing at what it’s possible to do and saying, should we be doing that?” . Fred Lowy, head of the Uni- versity of Toronto’s new Centre for Bioethics and a former dean of medicine, agrees. “In the last three decades, technology has brought us to the point where there are a lot of questions that physicians face regularly that the wisdom of the ages doesn’t help us with, because the ages never had to deal with genetic engineer- ing and in vitro fertilization.” The list doesn’t stop there. Medical ethics is asking new ques- tions faster than we can answer them. Ownership of embryos, or- gan harvesting (removing organs from the dead), the use of aborted fetal tissue, animals as a source of organs for transplantation, sur- rogate motherhood, and the allo- cation of scarce health-care funds are all issues of increasing con- cern. When a society has more tech- nology than cash, how do you decide who benefits and who doesn’t? One of the measures of the current gap between technology and ethics can be measured by the number — up to 10,000 in North America, according to one estimate — of people kept alive by feeding tubes in what’s known as persistent vegetative state. No- ‘body knows what to do with this population’ of the living dead. Doctors, almost by reflex, have traditionally been trained to save life, not end it. And next-of-kin, who in many cases have the au- thority to request that their rel- atives be allowed to die, have of- ten been reluctant to make such irrevocable decisions. But that is changing. There are now geriatric hospitals which do not, as a matter of policy, resuscitate heart attack victims. Doctors in regular hospitals issue DNR (do not resuscitate) orders at patients’ requests. The grow- ing patients’ rights movement, the increasing tendency to ques- tion the authority of physicians, and the trend of taking quality of life into consideration are all playing a role. Lowy believes some doctors have not yet learned to cope with the demands of technology. “Qnce in a while, you get some overzealous physician or a group of health care workers in a hospital who will try to resus- citate an 85-year-old person who is dying, without any prospect of success in the long run, just _ because technologically you can keep a person like that going for another few months — at great ex- pense to the public, by the way. That’s an example to me of tech- nology running wild.” The question of rights is the great quagmire of medical ethics. As author James Restak notes in Premeditated Man, questions of ethics are often really questions of power. Who has the final say? The patient, the doctor, or the government? Who decides when life should end, and who should be allowed — or obliged — to end it? Should it be legal, under cer- tain circumstances, to kill peo- ple? And is killing different from “allowing to die?” It depends where you live. In Canada, a physician can let peo- ple die — if they request it — but by Padraic Brake and Dawn Mitchell HALIFAX (CUP) - Dr. Henry Morgen- taler has launched an appeal with Nova Scotia’s highest court to al- low him to perform abortions in that province. Morgentaler’s lawyer filed the appeal after the provincial Tories were granted an injunction by the Nova Scotia Supreme Court for- bidding abortions at the doctor’s new Halifax clinic. Under recent provincial leg- islation, a series of medical op- erations — including abortions — must be performed at an ap- proved hospital. E “The law was established to prevent Morgentaler from oper- ating a clinic in Nova Scotia,” said Halifax clinic official Sandra Lanz. “They have stopped him for now. “But it will continue to op- erate as a referral and coun- selling centre for women in At- lantic Canada.” cannot kill them. In Holland, on the other hand, a doctor can kill if requested to. Doctors and ethi- cists agree that today, Donald C. would probably get his discharge. But if he wanted a lethal injec- tion so that he would not have to endure the pain of a prolonged death from infected, pus-covered sores, it is unlikely he could find a doctor in North America who would administer one. In the Netherlands, however, - thousands have requested and re- ceived such lethal injections, in the last stages of AIDS for exam- ple. There is no distinction made between “passive euthanasia”, or allowing a patient to die, and “ac- tive euthanasia”, or killing a pa- tient. “There is some moral consen- sus among some ethicists that that’s a phony distinction,” says Meslin. “If your intention is to permit that patient to die a good death, then it really shouldn’t matter what the means are.” About 80 per cent of the 1,500 abortion performed yearly in Nova Scotia: are at Hali- fax’s Victoria General Hospital. Women under 19 need consent from one parent, according to the Canadian Abortion Rights Ac- tion League (CARAL). CARAL states that more than 500 Atlantic women travel annually to clinics in Quebec or Ontario. Another 400 go to the United States. Morgentaler an- nounced in March that he would open a Halifax clinic after the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the restrictive abortion law as an unconstitutional violation of the right to the security of the person. The federal Conservatives in- troduced a bill earlier this month which makes having an abortion without valid “social, psycholog- ical or economic cause” punish- able by two years in jail. Doctors at the Halifax clinic performed 13 abortions on two Nevertheless, Meslin admits that Canada “is not prepared yet asa nation to endorse active euthana- sia.” Others take a harder line. Michael Coughlin, ethics consul- tant at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Hamilton, Ontario, feels we should keep the distinction very clear. “I think it’s an important dis- tinction. this is where my religious perspective comes in. We’re not the mas- ters of life. We’re still dependent — on a higher power, on God — In a sense, and we’re also dependent on each other. portant that we recognize that we don’t have total mastery over the world and over our lives. We have a death-denying culture. One of the ways of denying death is to Because of that, it’s im- show control over it by making it happen.” Continued on Page 3... Morgentaler Launches Appeal In Halifax separate days. Lanz said patients included women who: had travelled from Newfoundland New Brunswick to obtain an abortion. and Noreen Golfman, an official with an abortion rights group in St. John’s, said the women were those who could afford to travel. “There is a problem with ac- cessiblity when we receive calls daily for referral services to Mon- treal and Toronto when the local hospital is supposed to be provid- ing abortion services,” said Lanz. Only one doctor in the entire province of Newfoundland per- forms abortions. There is of- ten four to five-week waiting list, CARAL states. Morgentaler has said that he will take the Medical Services Act to the Supreme Court if he has to. There are free-standing abor- tion clinics in Toronto, Winnipeg and Montreal. Access across the rest of the country, said CARAL, is uneven. T