Showing posts with label assisted suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assisted suicide. Show all posts

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Brittany Maynard: Death with Dignity or Exploitation? Terminally Ill, She Plans to Take Her Own Life

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Philadelphia Inquirer, Thursday, October 30, Front Page, Page A1:



Brittany Maynard: death with dignity or exploitation?

Brittany Maynard and husband Dan Diaz. (Courtesy: Tara L. Arrowood)
Brittany Maynard and husband Dan Diaz. (Courtesy: Tara L. Arrowood)
Brittany Maynard and husband Dan Diaz. (Courtesy: Tara L. Arrowood)GALLERY: Brittany Maynard: death with dignity or exploitation?
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A California newlywed, Brittany Maynard, 29, diagnosed with a swift and fatal brain cancer, has moved with her husband to Oregon so she can have control at the end of her life under Oregon's pioneering death-with-dignity law.
She has legally obtained a lethal prescription and intends to use it, possibly as early as Saturday. And she has partnered with Compassion & Choices, an advocacy group pushing for more laws like Oregon's, to use her death to raise awareness and support for physician-assisted suicide, now available in only five states.
Her story and video went viral on the Web in the last three weeks. Since Oct. 6, nearly nine million people have viewed her six-minute video on YouTube - and a new video will be released today. More than three million have visited the Compassion & Choices websites.
"This chick is a hero," said Martha Frye Kienzle, who graduated from Jefferson Medical College in May and is now a  pediatric resident  in St. Louis, in a post on Facebook.
MORE COVERAGE
  • Everyone's brain generates emotions the same way
  • Asked to elaborate, Kienzle e-mailed: "She's setting an example. People die terrible deaths in this country. And the issue of physician-assisted suicide has really dropped off the radar in recent years. It should be everyone's right to do what she's doing."
     Many disagree.
     Ira Byock, a hospice and palliative-care physician and author of Dying Well, is a longtime opponent of assisted suicide. He says the exploitation of Maynard's case "borders on pornographic. No light here and a lot of heat."
    Maynard, of San Francisco, was diagnosed in January. By April, she had been given six months.
    "There is not a cell in my body that is suicidal or that wants to die," Maynard told People.com. "I want to live. I wish there was a cure for my disease, but there's not.
    "My glioblastoma is going to kill me," she added. "I've discussed with many experts how I would die from it, and it's a terrible, terrible way to die. Being able to choose to go with dignity is less terrifying."
    The Oregon Death with Dignity Act was extremely controversial when enacted in 1997.  Oregon voters twice had to pass a statewide referendum to authorize it.  Ultimately, the law was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, which has ruled that assisted suicide is not a constitutional right but that the issue should be left to the "laboratory" of the states.
    Washington and Vermont have passed laws almost identical to Oregon's, and courts in New Mexico and Montana have granted citizens in those states similar rights.
    The Oregon law states that if a person is found by two doctors to be terminally ill with six months or less to live and deemed mentally competent, the patient can obtain a lethal dose of drugs. The dying must ingest the drugs themselves without any assistance from doctors or loved ones.
    Versions of the Oregon law are awaiting legislative action locally. John Burzichelli, an assemblyman from Gloucester County, predicts what he calls aid-in-dying legislation will be passed by the New Jersey Assembly by the end of 2014.
    "I think it could get out of the Senate," said Burzichelli, a sponsor. "I don't know if this governor signs it. But things change."
    Prospects are dim in Pennsylvania. "Lying in quiet repose in committee" is how Daylin Leach, a state senator from Montgomery County, described his bill's status.
    In 14 years, 1,173 Oregonians have had prescriptions written under the law; 752 have used them to die, on average 53 a year.
    Many who obtain the drugs choose not to take them. Maynard has said that she feels no pressure to take the drugs but is glad to have them.
    "I can't tell you the amount of relief it provides me," she said. "I know it's there when I need it."
    Bioethicist Arthur Caplan at New York University strongly opposed the Oregon law at first but now has no objection. Time has shown him the law is rarely used and is not abused.
    He says Maynard's impact could be huge politically.
    "She is a newlywed, attractive, passionate, and committed," he said. "This shifts the issue of physician-assisted suicide from baby boomers to millennials. Critics of legalization know this and are especially worried. They have seen what can happen when young people are mobilized - Obama's election, gay marriage, and marijuana legalization."
    Byock, who retired last year as head of palliative medicine at the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, N.H., said America knows how to provide compassionate care at the end of life but does not do so, calling that a national disgrace.  Too often, American doctors are not trained in end-of-life care. Patients are impoverished trying to pay for medical and long-term care. Nursing homes are poorly staffed and people are left feeling unwanted and undignified.
    "I and the teams with whom I've worked have cared for hundreds of people as tragic as Brittany Maynard," he said. "We didn't let any of them die suffering. They died as gently and peacefully as I hope Brittany Maynard dies. This is possible today with really good medical care, including palliative care and hospice."
    Barbara Coombs Lee, architect of Oregon's law and head of Compassion & Choices, debated Byock on public television.
    "Hospice and palliative care is the gold standard," she told Byock. "It's wonderful. But it's not a miracle. And it cannot prevent the kind of relentless, dehumanizing, horrific decline that Brittany faces, where her disease will cause unending seizures and headaches and nausea and vomiting and pressure in her brain, and the loss of every bodily function, including thinking and moving.
    "No palliative care, terminal sedation, or promise of effective palliative care can give Maynard the thing she treasures now," Coombs Lee said - "the hope of gaining control over her disease before it takes her life."
    Maynard has objected to Byock's characterization that she was being exploited. She and her husband made the decision to move to Oregon long before she got involved with Compassion & Choices. And the amazing public respone has given the end of her life meaning. As she wrote on a Compassion & Choices website last week, "something monumental has started to happen."
    On Friday, Maynard also posted photos of a trip to the Grand Canyon, and expressed "thanks to the kindness of Americans around the country who came forward to make my 'bucket list' dream come true."
    Unfortunately, she added, the following morning she had her worst seizure so far and was unable to speak for hours.
    She has said the date she ends her life is not set in stone but would depend on how she's feeling.
    Her original plan was to celebrate her husband's birthday on Friday, and then on Saturday, surround herself with the people she loves, play her favorite music, and die peacefully in her own bed, her husband beside her.

    Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/health/20141030_Brittany_Maynard__death_with_dignity_or_exploitation_.html#pjkwYae6yKAdhgv4.99

    Wednesday, March 5, 2014

    Guidelines Will Help End-of-LIfe Oversight

    Philadelphia Inquirer, Wednesday, March 5, 2014, Page A3, STAFF REPORT/HEALTH:



    Guidelines will help end-of-life oversight

    GALLERY: Guidelines will help end-of-life oversight

    When the hospice nurse called police in the assisted-suicide case of Barbara Mancini, David Casarett knew he had work to do.
    He feared that the actions of one hospice nurse could discourage Americans from using that model of palliative care for the terminally ill, or inhibit dying people in pain from taking morphine.
    So Casarett, a University of Pennsylvania physician and chief medical officer of Penn-Wissahickon Hospice, teamed with law professor Thaddeus Pope, formerly of Widener University and an expert in end-of-life law, to develop ethical guidelines for hospice workers nationwide on when to report suspicions of assisted suicide.
    They have received a $50,000 grant from the Greenwall Foundation, which promotes bioethical research.
    A judge threw out the case against Mancini on Feb. 11, a year after she was charged. In that time, "both her life and the lives of her family have been altered irreparably," Casarett and Pope wrote in their grant request. "Moreover, this case has a far broader societal impact. Such cases exert a dangerous chilling effect on the appropriate use of [morphine] and even on the use of hospice itself."
    Mancini, 58, a Philadelphia nurse, was arrested Feb. 7, 2013, for putting morphine into the hands of her 93-year-old father. Joseph Yourshaw was terminally ill and in savage pain when, in his Pottsville home, he consumed the legally prescribed morphine she passed to him upon his request.
    Barbara Cattermole, a nurse with Hospice of Central Pennsylvania, arrived soon afterward, saw Yourshaw, spoke with his daughter, and called her supervisors and police. She testified at a preliminary hearing that Mancini told her she had honored her father's wishes and attempted to help him die.
    Mancini, an experienced emergency-room nurse at Lankenau Medical Center, disputed that in an Inquirer interview after the case was dismissed. She said she never tried to help him end his life, only handed him the morphine as he had asked her to do. Her father was never unconscious during the encounter, she said, adding that his living will had been trampled.
    Yourshaw had repeatedly told family and hospice workers that he wanted to die and had a do-not-resuscitate order. After police were called, Yourshaw was taken by ambulance to a hospital and revived; he died there four days later, after receiving more morphine.
    "The decision to throw out the case against Barbara Mancini doesn't reduce the urgency of developing hospice guidelines about assisted suicide," Casarett said this week. "It's tempting to look at this case and conclude that 'all's well that ends well,' but this experience has been very difficult for [her] and her family."
    Mancini lost her job, and incurred about $100,000 in legal fees.
    "Hospice staff," Casarett added, "need clear guidance about their ethical and legal obligations when they suspect that a family member has hastened a patient's death."
    Reporting requirements are fraught with risk. "Anything that requires reporting, if you overdo it, there's harm," said Pope, who now teaches at Hamline University in Minnesota and publishes a blog on futility care. He will be in Philadelphia next Wednesday for a debate on end-of-life care at the World Affairs Council.
    "People will err on the side of reporting," Pope said, "because they can get in trouble for not reporting."
    He and Casarett said they don't blame Cattermole, the hospice nurse, who believed a crime had occurred.
    In five states, consuming a lethal dose of prescribed medicine to end one's life is legal. But in Pennsylvania, it is not.
    "A blanket policy that hospice staff should report any suspicion of assisted suicide would be unwise and potentially harmful," Casarett wrote in the grant proposal. "Therefore, guidance is needed regarding principles for appropriate reporting. These should balance the need to protect vulnerable patients against the need to avoid negative consequences."
    The two note that more than 1.6 million people use hospice every year - a number expected to increase with growth of the elderly population and trends in increased hospice utilization.
    They hope to publish their findings in prominent medical journals later this year.


    mvitez@phillynews.com
    215-854-5639 @michaelvitez

    Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/health/20140305_Guidelines_will_help_end-of-life_oversight.html#tkdV0iGYoHAAHMDt.99


    Sunday, February 16, 2014

    Aided-Suicide Case Dismissed, After 1 Year!!!!

    Philadelphia Inquirer, Sunday, February 15, 2014, Page A2, "STAFF REPORTS/HEALTH CARE"



    With aided-suicide charge rejected, daughter recounts ordeal

    "It made me feel like I lived in a country where Vladimir Putin is president."

    Barbara Mancini in 1992 with her father, Joseph Yourshaw. Mancini, a nurse, had been accused of assisted suicide in his death.
    Family photo
    Barbara Mancini in 1992 with her father, Joseph Yourshaw. Mancini, a nurse, had been accused of assisted suicide in his death.
    Barbara Mancini, speaking out for the first time, described the afternoon when she was arrested for assisted suicide, and when her father was revived against his wishes, as "a surreal nightmare."
    "I just couldn't believe it," she recounted Wednesday, the day after a Schuylkill County judge dismissed the yearlong case against her. "It didn't seem like this could possibly be happening to me or to him. Absolutely the worst thing in the world."
    Schuylkill County Judge Jacqueline Russell said the attorney general's case rested on conjecture and lacked evidence. An agency spokesman said it was reviewing the decision and would comment Tuesday on whether it planned to appeal.
    Mancini was an emergency-room nurse for 20 years at Lankenau Medical Center in Wynnewood until she lost her job after the arrest. The hospital said Thursday that she could have it back, though Mancini, who lives in Roxborough, said she wanted to make sure the offer was good even if the attorney general appealed.
    "It made me feel like I lived in a country where Vladimir Putin is president," Mancini said of her prosecution, which drew international attention. "This is what you think happens in Russia, that you get arrested on trumped-up charges and prosecuted for political reasons."

    So what happened on that day, Feb. 7, 2013?
    What is well documented was that her father, Joseph Yourshaw, 93, had no quality of life and wanted to die.
    On the day of his hospice admission, Jan. 17, 2013, nurse Barbara Cattermole wrote in a progress note: "Most important to patient now: wants to die."
    He suffered from diabetes and high blood pressure, which had led to a stroke and heart disease. He was in kidney failure and had refused dialysis, refused all treatments.
    Repeatedly noted on hospice records were that he had a living will, a "Do Not Resuscitate" order, wanted to die at home, and that Mancini had his power of attorney to make decisions if he could not make them.
    The prosecution argued - based on testimony at the preliminary hearing by hospice staff - that Mancini had pushed hospice to prescribe morphine for her father when he didn't want it.
    Mancini spent the last five months poring over his hospice and medical records, and reached the opposite conclusion, that Hospice of Central Pennsylvania failed to treat his pain and keep him comfortable.
    "I believe if this hospice had not failed my father," she said, "he would not have been so desperate."
    The hospice and its nurse did not respond Friday to calls.
    On Feb. 6, Yourshaw fell in his Pottsville home. He was in such pain that night, his wife and son couldn't even remove his clothes.
    "My mother was in tears when she called me that night," Mancini said.
    When Mancini arrived on the morning of the 7th, her father was still sleeping. He was routinely sleeping 16 to 18 hours a day - also noted in hospice records - common for a person near the end of his life.
    Mancini's mother needed a break, and went to lunch with a friend. Yourshaw woke after a while. Normally, he wore a Depend, but had been in too much pain to let his family put one on. When he woke, he was wet.
    "I told him we had to get him out of those wet clothes," Mancini recalled. "He let me do it, which was the first time I ever changed my father. That wasn't easy for him. I helped him to the commode, which was right next to the bed. He was in a lot of distress. Then he wanted to get back into bed. And asked me to bring him his medicine, his morphine.
    "I brought it in from the kitchen, and I handed it to him."
    The morphine that hospice prescribed, Roxanol, came in a concentrated liquid, in a bottle smaller than a shot glass. A dose was a few drops on the tongue.
    "He took the cap off and he drank it," Mancini continued, "and I said, 'Ooo, I think you might have just drank a lot of morphine there.' He said, 'I just want to go to sleep.'
    "He didn't say, 'I want to die.' Well, every day he said he wanted to die. He didn't say, 'I just drank that to kill myself.'
    "I just sat there and held his hand," she said. "And then we just started talking. He liked to talk about World War II. [Yourshaw fought in the Battle of the Bulge.] He stayed awake for quite some time. That's a rapid-acting morphine, but it didn't work rapidly on him. I don't know if he'd developed a tolerance."
    The prosecution alleged the bottle was nearly full, a lethal dose, all part of the conspiracy to end his life. Mancini said she had no idea how much was in the bottle. "I held his hand, and he got sleepy and sleepy. He was never unconscious. I would say he was lethargic."
    At that point, the phone rang. Because Yourshaw had fallen the day before, Cattermole wanted to see him and could be there  in 15 minutes. Mancini said fine.
    "When she came in," Mancini recounted, "I said, 'I want to tell you something.' I told her he drank what was left in the bottle. I thought she should know. She looked worried. She checked him out. I guess she thought he was going to die then. She listened to his lungs, looked at pupils.
    "She said, 'Do you mind if I do Reiki treatment to help him pass?' I assume she meant help him die. I said OK.
    "She put her hands on his head, and his shoulders, hips, and she's waving her hands over him. I'm guessing it took like 10 minutes. She did this whole thing."
    Mancini said Cattermole then told her that she was likely going to be there awhile, that she better go outside and make some calls, cancel her other appointments.
    "She was calm, and I was calm," Mancini said.
    Cattermole went outside and called her supervisor. "She came back in," Mancini said, "and told me, 'He has to go to ER to be treated for an overdose.'
    "I felt like someone did this to me," said Mancini, pretending to stab herself in the heart. "Then I got really upset," she said. "Really upset."
    "I said to her: 'He's suffering. He wants to die.' Now, I didn't say he did that to die. I said he's suffering and wants to die. He has a living will. He doesn't want to do that. She told me I didn't have a choice. I started to cry. I was yelling at her. She told me that she had to report it. I told her, 'I'm not going to let you take him.' "
    Cattermole called supervisor Barbara Woods and handed Mancini the phone. Woods "insisted that he had to go to the ER, that they were calling 911. I lobbed a lot of F-bombs at her," said Mancini.
    Then: "I threw the phone against the wall."
    "I don't erupt like this," Mancini said. "I never imagined that a hospice would invalidate my father's end-of-life wishes. And he was adamant. He made me promise he'd never go to the hospital."
    Cattermole's version at the preliminary hearing was much different. She said Mancini told her she had fulfilled her father's wish and asked for more morphine to finish the job.
    "That never happened," Mancini said. "Never. I never said, 'I fulfilled his wish.' I never asked for more morphine. I did say, 'This morphine never relieved his pain.' "
    Her father, she said, was never unconscious. He was able to track Cattermole's finger with his eyes, and when the ambulance crew asked him whether he was in any pain, she said, he replied no. She laughed at the irony there. "That was probably the first time he wasn't in pain."
    Yourshaw was taken to Pottsville Hospital and revived with Narcan at 3:45 p.m. He was immensely agitated, records show. His first words, and repeated words, were: "Don't let anyone hurt Barbara."
    Mancini believes he had been alert enough at home to observe the shouting and screaming.
    Mancini was arrested on the spot. Fingerprinted, arraigned, released on $100,000 bail. Never again allowed to be alone with her father. He died in the hospital four days later - ironically after being given morphine by the hospital. Mancini wept once during the long interview, when describing how her father suffered in the hospital at the end and went to his grave so worried about her.
    "I think, in time, I'll be able to move on from this," she said, "but he doesn't get to do over his death. He will always have had a horrible, painful death. And there's nothing I can do about it."


    mvitez@phillynews.com 215-854-5639 @michaelvitez