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LaRee and Mark |
My wife, LaRee, and I were asked to address a conference
about critical life issues sponsored by the Diocese of Metuchen in New Jersey this coming Saturday.
They wanted us to speak about a Christian perspective on suffering, disability
and end of life care. It is a timely topic because New Jersey is considering a
law to allow assisted suicide. The diocese wanted the dual perspectives of someone with a degenerative and incurable
condition like multiple sclerosis (me) ― and the perspective of a loved-one watching the deterioration and unable to stop it (my wife). LaRee and I looked forward to going to New
Jersey for two reasons: Firstly, we thought we could bring a needed life-affirming
Christian story to the debate that is raging in that state. Secondly, we were
going to celebrate our 40th anniversary after the conference in
nearby city of New York. It was not to be.
LaRee’s aged mother’s frail physical condition started to
take a life-threatening turn for the worse in Edmonton (Canada). We could not risk being so far away
from her. Once again, my wife’s is giving a profound witness, by her actions, for
Christian care of those who are vulnerable and cannot care for themselves. We
cancelled our trip.
My wife’s active love for others has been illustrated for
more than half of her lifetime.
Her mother lives in a secular nursing home and has dementia; her
confusion makes her frightened and she cries out for LaRee. As soon as she enters her mother’s room, all
is calm again because she knows she is safe with LaRee near.
Unfortunately, my wife has deep reservations about
anything that would put her mother in secular acute care hospital settings. That should come as no surprise in the current climate sympathetic to euthanasia. The
threat of her mother being denied nutrition and hydration (food and water) is
very real. LaRee’s grandmother endured that cruel fate ten years ago and died a torturous
death. It happens all the time to vulnerable people. In this new bioethical era, the incurably ill, dying, aged, and severely
disabled are increasingly fearful of hospitals where some physician ― with full
backing of a hospital ethics committee ― may decide providing treatment to them
is futile. Happily, I know of no instance where this has occurred in any Catholic hospital.
Treatments may be futile but the patient is never futile.
Doing anything to hasten the death of a sick or dying person is always wrong
and flies in the face of a very long tradition of Hippocratic medicine. That’s why I
previously wrote that Catholic hospitals must never acquiesce to trends in bioethics
that do not recognize the innate dignity and worth of every human being
regardless of their state or stage in life.
Whether or not physicians working in Catholic hospitals are
Catholic, they must adhere to the principles of Catholic teaching. As a person
with advanced multiple sclerosis, I want to know I can rest confident knowing that
medical decisions about my care follows those teachings.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that euthanasia is
morally unacceptable (2277-2279). Any act of omission that causes death (like
withholding food and water) is considered as murder and must always be
forbidden. The Church does recognize there are times when active treatment designed to cure a dying patient ceases to be appropriate. “Discontinuing medical procedures that are burdensome, dangerous,
extraordinary, or disproportionate to the expected outcome can be legitimate”.
If death of a patient is imminent, “painkillers to alleviate sufferings of the
dying, even at the risk of shortening their days, can be morally in conformity
with human dignity if death is not willed as either an end or a means.” In such
cases, death is recognized as inevitable but not hastened. The underlying
principle is one of motive and intent. Death must never be the intent of any
medical action or inaction. If a cure is not possible, care still is. Killing is immoral and never acceptable!
This is the ethic by which every Catholic hospital must
operate its end of life care. They must always act in accordance with Catholic
teaching on matters of life and death and never give in to trends in bioethics,
secular pressures or financial burdens.
I am aware that American Catholic hospitals face difficult and challenging days ahead in this regard (and the demand to provide abortions) under Obamacare. Stand firm against the pressure, do not give in. Catholic care must prevail over Obamacare. If vulnerable people cannot rely on Catholic care to always value their lives, where can they go
to be safe?
I mentioned that that my mother-in-law feels safe when
LaRee is near. Even in her mounting dementia she seems to know she’s in good
hands. LaRee’s Christianity and familial love motivates her to stand in the gap
for her vulnerable loved-ones. Within the past few days she combed through her mother’s
advanced directive from 2009, and updated it to reflect 2013’s reality. She met
with her mother’s treating physician to make sure every measure for comfort is
given and ordinary care owed to all sick people is not interrupted (just like the
Catechism says).
By caring for her mother in this way, LaRee is giving a
vivid testimony to a culture of life that treats dying as the last phase of
living in which the bonds of humanity are strengthened, not weakened.
MDP
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