|
Teach Options to Assisted Suicide Instead (Hawaii)
Herbert Hendin & Kathleen Foley
The Hawaii Legislature is considering how best to address
what the U.S. Supreme Court has declared should be every person's right: care at
the end of life to relieve suffering.
The court made clear it was referring to palliative care,
the term for relief of suffering in patients with serious or life-threatening
illnesses. The court challenged the states to provide that care.
Hawaii, like many other states, has not yet done so. A
recent report by the Last Acts program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
evaluated end-of-life care in all 50 states.
Hawaii and Oregon " whose assisted-suicide law is serving
as a model for advocates of assisted suicide in Hawai'i " received equally
undistinguished marks.
Hawaii did poorly in the percentage of its doctors trained
in palliative care, hospitals providing palliative care and hospitals providing
pain management programs. Only 20 percent of terminally ill patients in Hawaii
receive hospice care. Only a little more than 20 percent are able to die at
home, although most prefer to do so.
Hawaii was among the 10 weakest states in adopting
adequate pain management.
Legislators need to address these urgent problems, which
affect tens of thousands of Hawaii residents and will affect many more as the
population ages. Three questions need to be addressed:
Does Hawaii need a law to protect dying patients from
unwanted treatments?
No, patients already have the same right to be relieved of
painful and inappropriate treatments that only prolong dying as they do to
refuse them in the first place.
This is not assisted suicide. Nor is giving medicine to
relieve suffering, even if it risks death. These practices, including sedation
of those near death, are accepted practices medically, ethically and legally.
Many people are not clear about these distinctions.
Advocates of assisted suicide have encouraged this confusion by using such terms
as "assisted death" or "death with dignity" that blur distinctions while
implying that these practices are currently illegal.
Isn't an assisted-suicide law working in Oregon?
Objective evidence indicates it is not. Oregon's law has
failure built into it. In becoming the first and only state to legalize assisted
suicide, Oregon drew on failed guidelines developed in the Netherlands, which
has 20 years' experience with legal sanctions. The guidelines consist of a
competent patient who has unrelievable suffering and makes a voluntary request
to a physician, who must consult with another physician and report the case
afterward to authorities.
Charges of abuse led the Dutch government to conduct
studies granting physicians immunity for anything they revealed. The studies
found that the guidelines were consistently violated and could not be enforced.
Most cases are not being reported, which makes regulation impossible. Any
reporting is done after the fact, which means only the doctor can tell what
happened.
Given legal sanction, assisted suicide and euthanasia "
intended originally for the exceptional case " have become an accepted way of
dealing with serious or terminal illness in the Netherlands. Palliative care has
become one of its casualties, while Dutch hospice care has lagged behind other
countries.
Most alarming in the Dutch studies has been the
documentation of several thousand cases a year in which patients who have not
given their consent have their lives ended by physicians. About one quarter of
physicians stated that they had "terminated the lives of patients without an
explicit request" from the patients to do so.
Oregon is experiencing many of the same problems. Although
it legalizes only assisted suicide and not euthanasia, the state's law differs
from the Dutch in one pernicious respect: Intolerable suffering that cannot be
relieved is not a criterion for assisted suicide in Oregon; simply having a
diagnosis of terminal illness with a prognosis of less than six months to live
is sufficient. This shifts the emphasis to satisfying statutory requirements
rather than relieving suffering. It encourages physicians to go through the
motions of offering palliative care.
Although physicians are required to inform patients
requesting assisted suicide that palliative care and hospice care are feasible
alternatives, they are not required to be knowledgeable about how to relieve
either physical or emotional suffering in terminally ill patients.
Without such knowledge " and most physicians have not been
trained in palliative care " the physician cannot present feasible alternatives.
Nor is the untrained physician required to refer any patient requesting assisted
suicide for consultation with a physician knowledgeable about palliative care.
A survey of Oregon physicians who received requests for
assisted suicide revealed that in only 13 percent of cases was there a
recommendation for a palliative-care consultation. Offering a patient palliative
care becomes a legal regulation to be met rather than an integral part of an
effort to relieve the patient's suffering so assisted suicide does not seem the
only alternative. How this happens is suggested by the experience of Helen.
Helen was in her mid-80s with metastatic breast cancer. Her
own physician had not been willing to assist in her suicide for unspecified
reasons; a second physician refused on the grounds that she was depressed. Helen
called Compassion in Dying (an advocacy group for physician-assisted suicide)
and was referred to a physician who would assist her.
After Helen's death, a Compassion in Dying news conference
featured an interview with Helen recorded two days before her death. In it, the
physician tells her there are other choices she could make, which he will list
for her.
He does this in three sentences covering hospice support,
chemotherapy and hormonal therapy.
Doctor: "There is, of course, all sorts of hospice support
that is available to you. There is, of course, chemotherapy that is available
that may or may not have any effect " not in curing your cancer, but perhaps in
lengthening your life to some extent. And there is also available a hormone
which you were offered before by the oncologist, tamoxifen, which is not really
chemotherapy but would have some possibility of slowing or stopping the course
of the disease for some period of time."
Helen: "Yes, I don't want to take that."
Doctor: "All right, OK, that's pretty much what you need to
understand."
A dismissive presentation of alternatives, limiting any
autonomous decision, is further compromised by the law's failure to require
psychiatric evaluation " the standard of care for patients contemplating
suicide.
Only if the physician believes the patient's judgment is
impaired is referral to a licensed psychiatrist or psychologist required. A
diagnosis of depression in itself is not considered a sufficient reason for such
a referral.
However, patients who desire an early death during a
serious or terminal illness, like other suicidal individuals, are usually
suffering from a treatable depressive condition. And studies have shown that
nonpsychiatric physicians are not reliable when diagnosing depression, let alone
determining whether it is impairing judgment.
The psychiatric consultation is intended to deal only with
the limited issue of a patient's capacity to make the decision for assisted
suicide to satisfy the statutory requirement of informed consent. The story of
Joan Lucas is illustrative.
An Oregon patient with a debilitating terminal illness,
Joan Lucas was assisted in suicide by a physician who stated that after talking
with lawyers and agreeing to help Joan, he asked her to undergo a psychological
examination.
"I elected to get a psychological evaluation" he said,
"because I wished to cover my ass. I didn't want there to be any problems."
A cooperative psychologist was found who asked Joan to take
a standard psychological test based on true-false questions. Because it was
difficult for Joan to travel to the psychologist's office, her children read the
questions to her at home. The family found the questions funny, and Joan's
daughter described the family as "cracking up over them."
Based on these results, the psychologist concluded that
whatever depression Joan had was a normal response to her illness. His opinion
is suspect, the more so because he did not feel it necessary to see her before
giving an opinion that would facilitate ending her life.
It was hoped that Oregon would serve as a laboratory
showing us how assisted suicide would work. This has not occurred. The law was
not written with such an aim in mind, and the Oregon Health Division has
approached it in a restrictive "don't ask, don't tell" manner.
The Health Division asks physicians to provide minimal
medical information, and there is no provision for independent evaluation of
whatever data is available.
They do not ask patients for information. Nor do they
interview hospice staff in close contact with patients requesting suicide. Nor
do they contact physicians who have declined patient requests for assisted
suicide.
To know what percentage of cases are not reported, or the
frequency of terminating life without any explicit request, the state would have
to do as the Dutch did, and grant immunity to physicians surveyed.
A survey of several thousand U.S. physicians throughout the
country revealed that almost 5 percent had given a patient a lethal injection,
in 79 percent of cases to patients who had not made an explicit request for it.
Dr. Diane Meier, who led the survey, had been a leading
advocate of legalizing assisted suicide. She changed her mind, concluding that
legal sanction would only encourage more physicians to believe they know best
who should live and who should die.
But shouldn't any terminally ill patient have an
autonomous right to assisted suicide?
Patient autonomy is a cruel illusion when most physicians
are not trained to assess and treat patient suffering or to diagnose and treat
depression. The choice for patients then becomes continued agony or a hastened
death.
Only recently have we recognized the need to train general
physicians in how to relieve the suffering of terminally ill patients. Studies
show that the less physicians know about palliative care, the more they favor
legal assisted suicide; the more they know, the less they favor it.
They know that patients requesting a physician's assistance
in suicide usually are telling us as strongly as they know how that they
desperately need relief from their fear and suffering, and that without such
relief, they would rather die.
When they are treated by a physician who can hear their
ambivalence, understand their desperation and relieve their suffering, their
wish to die usually disappears.
The World Health Organization has recommended that
governments not consider assisted suicide and euthanasia until they have
demonstrated the availability and practice of palliative care for their
citizens. In the United States, we have a long way to go to achieve the
end-of-life care that the U.S Supreme Court said is every patient's right. This
is the right that patients should demand and the challenge that states need to
meet.
Like most other people, legislators are strongly affected
by their personal experiences with the deaths of people close to them. They are
in the process of learning that with well-trained doctors and nurses and good
end-of-life care, it is possible to avoid the pain that many of their loved ones
went through.
But the legislators themselves have a vital role to play.
The Hawaii Legislature should act now to ensure that
medical school and residency programs include palliative care as part of their
training, and that all hospitals have palliative care and pain management
programs.
California has adopted training requirements, which we
think are desirable. Requiring at least annual public reports from medical
schools and hospitals would permit the Legislature, the media and the public to
measure progress.
The public is uninformed of its rights regarding
end-of-life care. The public awareness campaign of Hawai'i's Kokua Mau
(Continuous Care) project is an important first step. But Hawaii will need the
investigative and educational efforts of the press and broadcast media to create
an informed public that will be the best catalyst for progress.
Hawaii has a history of dealing with quality-of-life
issues. We hope it will not follow the failed policies of the Netherlands and
Oregon, but find its own way to take the lead in improving end-of-life care.
Herbert Hendin and Kathleen Foley are physicians and
authors of "The Case against Assisted Suicide: For the Right to End-of-Life
Care."
© COPYRIGHT 2004 The Honolulu Advertiser, a division of
Gannett Co. Inc.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Feb/09/op/op13a.html


Back To The TopSMHAI Home |
About Suicide |
About Mental Health |
Suicide Prevention |
Suicide Survivors
Suicide Attempters |
Self-Injury - Cutters |
Crisis |
Donate |
SMHAI Library |
Online Support & Resources
Speakers & Presentations |
Memorials, Remebrances & Celebrations Of Life |
Healing Music
Suggested Reading - Survivors |
Suggested Reading - Attempters & Self-Injurers |
Mental Health Pros.
Upcoming Events |
Dr. Roerich's Welcome |
Ann Gay's Welcome |
Legal & About SMHAI
Privacy Policy |
Copyright Notice |
Awards Honoring SMHAI |
SMHAI Awards Program |
Contact
© SMHAI 2004 - 2006 All Rights Reserved. No copying or redistribution without expressed written permission of SMHAI.
Logo Design by Allen R. Jacobson. Site launched July 01, 2004.
|