Download - Artificial Nutrition & Hydration: & Catholic Teaching

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Page 1: Artificial Nutrition & Hydration: &  Catholic Teaching

Artificial Nutrition & Hydration:&

Catholic Teaching

Philip Boyle, PhDVice PresidentMission & EthicsCatholic Health East

Page 2: Artificial Nutrition & Hydration: &  Catholic Teaching

Goal

• Review major questions & theories of withholding & withdrawing

• Explore cases

• Examine Church teaching on: – Nutrition & hydration– Vegetative state

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Public controversiesover H2O and PVS

• Quinlan: 1975 – 1985

• Cruzan: 1983 – 1990

• Schiavo: 1990 – 2005– Dates indicate the time from their

medical event to their death

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Cultural Controversy over Nutrition and Hydration

– Food and Water– The Meal– Physical suffering and comfort– Starvation and Dehydration– Emaciation– Hope:

• “At least we are doing something”

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• Prevent aspiration

• Improve/prevent pressure ulcers

• Reduced risk of infections

• Improve functional status

• Prolong life

• Improve comfort

Commonly Cited Reasons for Feeding/Tube

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Nutrition & hydration

• Effective for:– Stoke head injury, failure to thrive, short

bowel,

• Not effective for:– Dementia, dying pts, renal failure, CA pt in

terminal condition, increased risk of pressure sores, UTIs, brain swelling

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Comfort Feeding & Dementia

• Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, March 2010– Comfort feeding– Evidence: longer life without feeding tube

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Questions at end of life

• Who decides?– Informed Consent– Advance Directives

• What is the basis for termination?– Autonomy & self determination– Futility– Quality of life– Burden-Benefit ratio

• Can the institution cooperate?

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Moral complexity• If there is disagreement with reason to

forego, one might conclude we have the wrong decision-maker

• If the right decision maker is identified, one might infer the institution has no choice

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Case 1

• Martha 49-yr-old – Hypertension, quit smoking – After stroke living will, but no DNR– 2nd stroke, coma then PVS– NG-tube– Husband asks for stop “quality of life”– Priest –”starving”– Law requires terminal condition– Husband asks to “do something” to hasten death

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Case 2

• Marge 60 advanced Alzheimer’s

• Refusing food, combative

• Peg tube counter indicated

• Sister alleging starvation and causing suffering

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Case 3

• Henry 60-yr-old alcoholic

• Fall & head bleed

• 5 week coma then opens eyes

• No advance directive

• Family wants nothing done

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Theories of termination

• Autonomy/self determination

• Quality of life

• Futility

• Burden-benefit ratio

• What distinguishes appropriate from inappropriate terminations?– Letting die v. killing

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Theories of termination

• Quality of life– Common usage– QALYs– From whose perspective?

• Subjective judgment that can be biased

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Development of killing & letting die

• St. Antonius of Florence 1450 – Can monks fast to the point of death or do they have to eat

more than bread and water?

• Francisco DeVitoria 1550– “…would a sick person who does not eat because of some

disgust for food be guilty of a sin equivalent to suicide?...”– And answers, “…If the patient is so depressed or has lost his

appetite so that it is only with the greatest effort that he can eat food, this right away ought to be reckoned as creating a kind of impossibility, and the patient is excused, at least from mortal sin, especially if there is little or no hope of life.”

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Theories of termination: Burden-benefit ratio

Pius XII “The Prolongation of Life” 1958• “Normally one is held to use only ordinary means—

according to the circumstances, places, times, culture—that is to say means that do not involve and grave burden for one self or others. A more strict obligations would be too burdensome for most people and would render the attainment of a higher more important good too difficult. Life, health and all temporal activities are subordinated to spiritual ends.”

Appropriate v. inappropriate

Extraordinary v. ordinary

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History Declaration on Euthanasia CDF 1980• “…people prefer to speak of proportionate and

disproportionate”…it will be possible to make a correct judgment by studying the type of treatment, its degree of complexity of risk, costs and possibility of using it, and comparing these to the results to be expected taking into account the state of the sick person, and his or her physical and moral resources.”

Appropriate v. inappropriate terminationDisproportionate v. proportionate

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Directive 32

• “While every person is obliged to use ordinary means to preserve his or her health, no person should be obliged to submit to a health care procedure that the person has judged, with a free and informed conscience, not to provide a reasonable hope of benefit without imposing excessive risks and burdens on the patient or excessive expense to family or community.”

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Directive 57

• “A person may forgo extraordinary or disproportionate means of preserving life. Disproportionate means are those that in the patient's judgment do not offer a reasonable hope of benefit or entail an excessive burden, or impose excessive expense on the family or the community.”

Appropriate v. inappropriate

extraordinary v. ordinary

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Directive 60• “Euthanasia is an action or omission that of

itself or by intention causes death in order to alleviate suffering. Catholic health care institutions may never condone or participate in euthanasia or assisted suicide in any way.”

Appropriate v. inappropriateLetting die v. euthanasia

Secondary intent v. direct intent to cause death

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Double Effect

• All choices have many effects

• Primary choice needs to be good or at least neutral

• Secondary effect must not be a means to the good or neutral effect

• Secondary effect is see and accepted

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Cases

Continuum

Simplest ComplexDying patient Non-dying patient

Capacitated Incapacitated

Advance directive No advance directive

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Old Directive 58

• “There should be a presumption in favor of providing nutrition and hydration to all patients, including patients who require medically assisted nutrition and hydration, as long as this is of sufficient benefit to outweigh the burdens involved to the patient.”

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Directive 58

As a general rule, there is an obligation to provide patients with food and water, including medically assisted nutrition and hydration for those who cannot take food orally. This obligation extends to patients in chronic conditions (e.g., the “persistent vegetative state”) who can reasonably be expected to live indefinitely if given such care. Medically-assisted nutrition and hydration become morally optional when they cannot reasonably be expected to prolong life or when they would be “excessively burdensome for the patient or [would] cause significant physical discomfort, for example resulting from complications in the use of the means employed.”

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Directive 58 For instance, as the patient draws close to

inevitable death from an underlying progressive and fatal condition, certain measures to provide nutrition and hydration may become excessively burdensome and therefore, not obligatory in light of their very limited ability to prolong life or provide comfort.

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Case 1

• Martha 49-yr-old – Hypertension, quit smoking – After stroke living will, but no DNR– 2nd stroke, coma then PVS– NG-tube– Husband asks for stop “quality of life”– Priest –”starving”– Law requires terminal condition– Husband asks to “do something” to hasten death

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Case 2

• Marge 60 advanced Alzheimer’s

• Refusing food, combative

• Peg tube counter indicated

• Sister alleging starvation and causing suffering

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Case 3

• Henry 60-yr-old alcoholic

• Fall & head bleed

• 5 week coma then opens eyes

• No advance directive

• Family wants nothing done

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Nutrition & hydration

• Simplest case: grave burden– Close to death– Feeding cause pain/agitation

• Moderate case: Advanced Alzheimer's– Refusing to eat

• Difficult case: non-dying (Schiavo)

• Simplest Difficult

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Does the obligation to provide nutrition and hydration change depending on:

– coma

– vegetative state

– minimally conscious state

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Definitions and Diagnostic Criteria

Coma: Definition (MSTF, 1994)____________________________

Coma is a state of sustained

pathologic unconsciousness in

which the eyes remain closed and

the patient cannot be aroused.

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Vegetative State: Definition (Aspen Workgroup, 2001)

The vegetative state is a condition in which there is complete absence of behavioral evidence for awareness of self and environment, with preserved capacity for spontaneous or stimulus-induced arousal.

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Minimally Conscious State (MCS)(Giacino, et al., Neurology, 2002)

The minimally conscious state is a condition of severely altered consciousness in which minimal but definite behavioral evidence of self or environmental awareness is demonstrated.

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Moral issues of PVS

• The mere fact of the state is not sufficient justification for termination of nutrition and hydration.

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Summary

• Doctrinal clarification• No categorical prohibition on ANH• Always a presumption in favor of ANH• Clearest cases:

– Capacitated patients – Patients with clear directives– Patients with little burden/ large

benefit/ primary intent is death (i.e., sole reasons is PVS)