It Takes a Long Time to Starve a
Severely Disabled Infant to Death by
Withdrawing Medically-Supplied Nutrition
By Wesley J. Smith
Editor's note. This first
appeared on Wesley's fine blog at
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/2010/10/21/it-takes-a-long-time-to-starve-a-severely-disabled-infant-to-death-by-withdrawing-medically-supplied-nutrition/
Tube
supplied hydration and nutrition is deemed a medical treatment,
like aspirin, surgery, or chemotherapy, and hence, can be denied
or withdrawn under the law. Normal receipt of food and water, is
not allowed to be withheld when it can be taken, since that
isn't medical treatment. Still, take away either form of
sustenance from infants (or adults) and they will die.
A disturbing study has come out
about how long it takes to starve an infant to death, I assume
by withdrawing tube-supplied sustenance. From the study [you may
read it for free by signing up for free at
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/730086):
Neonatal survival after
withdrawal of artificial hydration and nutrition can last up to
26 days, according to a case series presented here at the 18th
International Congress on Palliative Care. Although physical
distress is not apparent in the infants, the psychological
distress of parents and clinicians builds with the length of
survival, said Hal Siden, MD, from Canuck Place Children's
Hospice in Vancouver, British Columbia.
"These babies live much, much
longer than anybody expects. I think that neonatologists and
nurses and palliative care clinicians need to be alerted to
this," he said. "The time between withdrawal of feeding and end
of life is something that is not predictable, and you need to be
cautioned very strongly about that if you are going to do this
work." He presented a series of 5 cases that clinicians at his
hospice had overseen over a 5-year period. Two infants had
severe neurologic impairment, 2 had severe hypoxic ischemia, and
1 had severe bowel atresia.
This means that these infants did
not die from the underlying conditions:
Despite this, there is one
factor that medication cannot alleviate, and that is the visual
signs of emaciation, said Ms. Keats.
"The longer a child lives, the
more emaciated he or she becomes. This is something that we as
clinicians need to anticipate.
You can alleviate some of the
physical symptoms, but this is one symptom, or result of our
action, that we can't relieve. A critical factor for counseling
is to anticipate the kind of suffering that comes with
witnessing the emaciation. It isn't something people can prepare
themselves for. "Autopsies are often encouraged in such neonatal
palliative care cases to help both parents and medical staff
gain a better understanding of the reasons for the death, said
Dr. Siden. Parents should be warned that the report will
document the technical cause of death as "starvation" -- a
loaded word for all concerned. It is important that parents
separate this word from any notion of suffering, he said.
The study wants infants being
dehydrated to become research subjects on the physiological
processes of being starved:
"All of the children we've
cared for have been in a very quiet, low metabolic state -- not
an agitated state -- with no overt signs of hunger behavior.
Whether they are neurologically capable of hunger behavior is
another question, and I don't know the answer. That's why I am
trying to understand better what they are going through, because
I don't want them to suffer," Dr. Siden explained.
He emphasized the importance
of more research into the physiologic processes that occur after
withdrawal of fluids and nutrition so that clinicians can both
inform and reassure parents. "There's an ethical component to
doing research. If you don't do research yourself, you need to
support those who do, because we desperately need to know more,"
Dr. Siden asserted. "There's a technical aspect to what we do,
and we need to become really good at that because we need to be
able to say to people, without a doubt, that we are going to do
this and there is not going to be any kind of suffering. You've
got to be very on top of your game."...
Maybe I am just too
unsophisticated to not find this study very disturbing. |