Abortion is not health care because killing is not healing
Saint Thomas More Respect Life Comittee at 1439 Springdale Road, Cherry Hill, NJ 08003 US - End-of-Life Decisions
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End-of-Life Decisions |
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| The death of Terri Schiavo raises a number of issues þu moral, legal and constitutional, about the right to life and the so-called right to die. Most coverage of the case focused on the question of her guardian's right to decide according to her alleged wishes and the due process of the judicial proceedings. However, at base the question was a moral, not a legal, one: under what conditions, if any, may a patient, a guardian, medical personnel or civil authorities, withhold or withdraw nutrition and hydration.
Catholic Teaching on Extraordinary Means The natural law and the Fifth Commandment1 requires that all ordinary means be used to preserve life, such as food, water, exercise, and medical care. Since the middle ages, however, Catholic theologians have recognized that human beings are not morally obligated to undergo every possible medical treatment to save their lives. Treatments that are unduly burdensome or sorrowful, such as amputation, or beyond the economic means of the person, or which only prolong the suffering of a dying person, are morally extraordinary, meaning they are not obligatory. The many advances in medicine during recent decades, however, has complicated the decision whether to undergo or forego medical treatment, since medicine can now save many people who would simply have been allowed to die in the past. Further, having saved them, many people continue to live for long periods in comatose or semi-conscious states, unable to live without technological assistance of one kind or another. The following Questions and Answers will address some of the complexities of this issue. Q. When may medical therapies, procedures, equipment and the like be withheld or withdrawn from a patient. A. The Catechism of the Catholic Church states,
The key principle in this statement is that one does not will to cause death. When a person has an underlying terminal disease, or their heart, or some other organ, cannot work without mechanical assistance, or a therapy being proposed is dangerous, or has little chance of success, then not using that machine or that therapy results in the person dying from the disease or organ failure they already have. The omission allows nature to takes its course. It does not directly kill the person, even though it may contribute to the person dying earlier than if aggressive treatment had been done. Q. Does this also apply to artificially provided nutrition and hydration? A. Yes, when the moral conditions noted above are met. We must, therefore, ask the question "will the withdrawal of nutrition and hydration allow the person to die, or kill the person?" When it will allow a person to die from an underlying condition, rather than unnecessarily prolonging their suffering, it may be removed. So, for example, in the last hours, even days, of a cancer patient's life, or if a sick person's body is no longer able to process food and water, there is no moral obligation to provide nutrition and hydration. The patient will die of their disease or their organ failure before starvation or dehydration could kill them. However, when the withdrawal of nutrition and hydration is intended to kill the person, or will be the immediate and direct cause of doing so, quite apart from any disease or failure of their bodies, then to withdraw food and water would be an act of euthanasia, a grave sin against the natural law and the law of God. Q. What about the case of Terri Schiavo? A. In Terri's case, while there was some disagreement as to her exact medical condition, she was not dying. The withdrawal of her food and water directly caused her death, and thus was a violation of the natural law and the law of God. Q. You mention the natural law, what is it? A. The natural law is morality which reason can determine from the nature of man, without the assistance of God's revelation. An example is the right to life. Almost all human societies throughout history, both religious and non-religious, have recognized that it is wrong to kill an innocent person. This is a conclusion which reason can easily come to, since all human beings have an inborn desire to live. From this natural law principle we can easily see that any action that directly and intentionally kills an innocent person is an unjust taking of a human life. Therefore, withdrawing food and and water from anyone who is not about to die and who can still tolerate it, has no other reasonable name than murder. Q. What does the Church say about this? A. The Pope addressed this issue in an address to a group of physicians who were in Rome in March 2004 precisely to discuss it. Note how he both uses the language of the natural law and the language of faith, which also tells us what we may do and not do.
Q. What can a person do to ensure that their wishes and their religious beliefs are respected by their family, medical personnel and the courts? A. The best way is by means of an Advance Directive which states the patients wishes with respect to aggressive medical treatment. There are two basic kinds, a Living Will by itself or an Advance Directive with a Durable Power of Attorney (or Proxy) for Health Care Decisions. The merits of each are as follows:
The following sample forms are provided through the courtesy of the National Catholic Bioethics Center. |
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Endnotes: 1The 5th Commandment, 6th in the Protestant listing, says "Thou shalt not kill." The implicit corollary is that one must save life, one's own and others by reasonable care þu not driving too fast, not taking drugs, seeing a doctor if home care cannot effect a cure of sickness, etc.. |














