Vermont Assisted Suicide
Bill the Usual Loophole Scam
Part Five of Five
By Wesley J. Smith
Editor's note. This
appears on Wesley's blog at
www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/2011/01/24/vermont-assisted-suicide-bill-the-usual-loophole-scam/
American assisted suicide
activists pretend that legalization is to be strictly
controlled. But the legislation they propose––and the laws they
pass––contain loopholes big enough for a hearse to drive
through. Latest example, the upcoming bill in Vermont to
legalize physician-prescribed death. From the draft bill:
For purposes of this
chapter: (1) "Attending physician" means the physician whom the
patient has designated to have primary responsibility for the
care of the patient and who is willing to participate in the
provision to a qualified patient of medication to hasten his or
her death in accordance with this chapter.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This provision allows a
suicidal patient to designate a death doctor she has just met as
the "attending physician." As we have seen in Oregon, many
assisted suicides are facilitated by doctors the patients first
met only weeks before their suicides. In other words, it opens a
whole field of practice that I think should be called
Kevorkianism, because the intent isn't treatment or palliation,
but being made dead. These will usually be doctors with close
affiliations with assisted suicide advocacy groups, as has
happened in Oregon where Compassion and Choices (formerly, the
Hemlock Society) facilitates the great majority of assisted
suicides.
Terminal condition is also
very loosely defined:
(12) "Terminal condition" means an incurable and irreversible
disease which would, within reasonable medical judgment, result
in death within six months.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Notice that there is
nothing in the definition stating something like, "even with
medical treatment." That means a diabetic who needs insulin
could be considered terminally ill, since stopping treatment
would generally mean death within six months. Similarly, a
person who can't swallow for whatever reason, who refuses a
feeding tube, could be deemed terminally ill.
The legislation purports
to require mental health "counseling" in some cases, but it does
no such thing:
(4) "Counseling" means a
consultation between a psychiatrist, psychologist, or clinical
social worker licensed in Vermont and a patient for the purpose
of confirming that the patient:
(A) has capacity; and
(B) is not suffering from
a mental disorder or disease, including depression that causes
the patient to have impaired judgment.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Counseling strongly
implies treatment and mental health interventions. But a
"consultation" is a mere assessment. This doesn''t even require
a meeting between patient and assessor––as has happened in
Oregon. From an article in the Michigan Law Review by Kathleen
Foley and Dr. Herbert Hendin that describes such a
""counseling"" session between a psychologist and an ALS patient
[http://www.spiorg.org/publications/HendinFoley_MichiganLawReview.pdf]:
The doctor and the family
found a cooperative psychologist who asked Joan to take the
Minnesota Multiphasic Inventory, a standard psychological test.
Because it was difficult for Joan to travel to the
psychologist's office, her children read the true-false
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 test results, the
psychologist concluded that whatever depression Joan had was
directly related to her terminal illness, which he considered a
completely normal response…… [Me: Can we say "rubber stamp"?]
The psychologist's report
in Joan's case is particularly disturbing because without taking
the trouble to see her, and on the basis of a single
questionnaire administered by her family, he was willing to give
an opinion that would facilitate ending Joan's life. The
physician's attitude toward the consultation surely played a
part in his receiving a report that did not meet professional
standards.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think about it, not even a
requirement for suicide prevention. The destructive message sent
by this kind of legislation is insidious, telling the terminally
ill that their lives have less value than those of other
suicidal people. It corrupts medicine by turning doctors into
death causers. And in times of medical resource constraints, it
leads to the attitude that money is better not spent on treating
the dying, but rather, in facilitating their suicides. And yes,
that already happened in Oregon, too.
And can you imagine, that
legislation require doctors to counsel patients not to kill
themselves in a public place?
(8) Counsel the patient
about the importance of ensuring that another individual is
present when the patient takes the medication prescribed
pursuant to this chapter and the importance of not taking the
medication in a public place.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And as with Oregon and
Washington, the standards of practice for death doctors is less
than that of doctors treating diseases:
§§ 5294. IMMUNITIES
(a) No person shall be
subject to civil or criminal liability or professional
disciplinary action for actions taken in good faith reliance on
the provisions of this chapter. This includes being present when
a qualified patient takes the prescribed medication to hasten
his or her death in accordance with this chapter.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Good faith is merely a
motive. Treating doctors have to meet proper standards of care
regardless of motives. But death is the agenda and nothing must
be allowed to interfere or dissuade.
Enough for now. This stuff
is just sickening.
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four |