Fast-Moving Idaho Bill Would Allow Hospitals to
Deny Life-Saving Treatment AGAINST THE WILL of
Patients and Families
Part One of
Two
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A bill that would effectively create a
"duty to
die" has unanimously passed the Idaho Senate and
is scheduled for a House committee hearing this
Thursday.
While "right-to-die" advocates used to say they
were defending the rights of patients and
families to make medical treatment choices, in
recent years the claim has been that doctors and
hospitals need not provide life-saving medical
treatment, food, or fluids chosen by patients
and their families if the health care providers,
imposing their own values, think the patients'
disabilities make their "quality of life"
inadequate.
As the Powell Center report on NRLC's website,
"Will Your Advance Directive Be Followed" [www.nrlc.org/euthanasia/AdvancedDirectives/ReportRevised2007.pdf]
documents, this approach is hidden under the
euphemisms that providers should be able to deny
"medically inappropriate" or "futile"
treatment--terms carefully left undefined, but
deadly in practice.
Now Idaho's Senate Bill 1114
would establish a procedure, adapted from a
controversial Texas law, under which patients or
their family members would be given only 24
hours notice before having to appear before a
facility-appointed "ethics committee."
After hearing from them and the doctors who
advocate the patient's death, the ethics
committee would have authority to decide against
life-preserving treatment.
In that case, treatment would be provided for up
to 15 days while transfer to a willing provider
was sought. While the patient or family could
seek a court-ordered extension, it would be
granted only if they could prove a "reasonable
probability" of finding a willing provider
within the extension period. There could be no
appeal of the decision to deny treatment itself.
Although the option to transfer may seem to help
the patient, experience in Texas has shown that
once one institution has refused to treat, it is
normally extremely difficult to find other
facilities willing to buck "medical solidarity,"
or conduct a serious independent review of the
facts and accept transfer.
Moreover, Idaho facilities would NOT EVEN BE
REQUIRED TO USE THE ETHICS COMMITTEE/TRANSFER
procedure. The bill specifically makes it
"voluntary" for each facility and states,
"Nothing in this chapter shall
require a health care facility to establish or
utilize an ethics committee, nor shall this
chapter require a health care provider or
surrogate decision maker to submit a matter to
the ethics committee before withdrawing or
withholding health care to a patient."
In short, the bill completely overrides patient
and family rights, instead giving essentially
absolute immunity to health care providers who
involuntarily deny life-saving treatment, food
and fluids so as to bring about the deaths of
those patients they in their sole judgment
consider too disabled to be worth saving.
Wesley Smith has an excellent expose of this
scary legislation on his blog at
www.wesleyjsmith.com/blog/2009/03/duty-to-die-in-idaho-legislature-close.html
Whether involuntary euthanasia comes to Idaho
may well depend on how many of the state's
citizens contact their representatives to
impress on them how essential it is to oppose SB
1114 in its current form.
Please send your comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. They are much
appreciated!
Part Two -- Classic Obama (www.nrlc.org/News_and_Views/Mar09/nv031009part2.html)