Notes - Ethics
Notes - Ethics
Notes - Ethics
BRAIN DEATH
One essential differentiation among patient types those who have suffered brain death and
those who are in a persistent vegetative state. With the modern technology of respiratory and cardiac
support, in certain cases of severe brain trauma we can keep the remainder of the body’s cell alive for
days and months with no brain activity being present. This has raised major problems in terms of the
classic definition of death based in the loss of cardiac and respiratory function. As a result of these
technological changes, a majority of jurisdictions within our nation have accepted the concept of brain
death. Brain death cases are often very problematic to families as the patient appears to have natural
warmth and color, the EKG may be in sinus rhythm, and the chest rises and falls with each cycle of
the ventilator. During this period of counseling, the practitioners will often broach the question of
consent to arrange for the harvest of valuable organs for transplantation. The support of the family at
this time of personal loss becomes the major concern of the health care practitioners. Great care and
sensitivity must be taken as equipment is removed.
Criteria for brain death: (Harvard Medical School Ad Hoc Committee)
Unreceptivity and unresponsiveness
No movements or breathing
No reflexes
Flat E.E.G. of confirmatory value
Ordinary means are all medicines, treatments, and operations that offer a reasonable hope of
benefit that can be obtained without excessive expense, pain, or other
inconvenience.
Extraordinary means are all medicines, treatments, and operations that cannot be obtained or
used without excessive expense, pain, or other inconvenience or that, if used, would not offer
a reasonable hope of benefit.
PERSONHOOD
One rather controversial line of reasoning that seems appropriate for cases involving patients
in a PVS with no hope for recovery is the examination of the requirements of personhood.
Philosophers such as Joseph Fletcher and Joel Feinberg have attempted to define characteristics that
being must possess in order to be considered a bearer of rights. Among the suggested criteria are:
1. One who could be said to have interests; a person whom something can be said to be good for
his own sake.
2. One who has cognitive awareness; a being of memories, expectations, and beliefs.
3. One who is capable of relationships. Interpersonal relationship seems to be at the very essence
of what we idealize in truly being a person.
4. One who has a sense of futurity. How truly human is someone who cannot realize there is a
time yet to come as well as a present? The words, “What do you want to become,” make
sense only in relation to a person.
It is clear that the reasoning involved in questions of personhood are of vital importance to the study
of biomedical ethics. Most of the focus of ethical thought is the person, the being who bears the rights
and responsibilities.
ADVANCED DIRECTIVES
In five-four decisions, the Court ruled that states do have these rights for the following
reasons:
The state has a right to assert an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life.
A choice between life and death is an extremely personal matter and requires clear and
convincing evidence of choice
Abuse can occur when incompetent patients don’t have loved ones available to serve as
surrogate decision makers.
The call for clear and convincing evidence in regard to these cases increased the interest in advanced
directives. The 1990 Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA) is a federal law regarding advanced
directives. The purpose of the PSDA is to make people aware of their rights. The joint commission
has developed standards for the documentation of patients wishes regarding advanced directives
which apply to the vast majority of health care institutions.
Nutrition and hydration may be withheld when either of the two following conditions is met:
1. The treatment is futile. In cases where all efforts to provide nutrition would be ineffective and
cause pain.
2. No possibility of benefit. While it is most often reasonable practice to provide nutrition and
hydration, in those cases where the family and caregivers agree that the practice offers no
benefit, such as a PVS case, there should be no barrier to discontinuance.
BABY DOE
It is about those situations involving withholding or withdrawing care from infants. The
regulations consider the withholding of medical care for these handicapped infants to be neglect. The
regulations provided three exceptions:
1. When the infant is chronically and irreversibly comatose.
2. When treatment would only prolong dying.
3. When the treatment would be futile or inhumane.
If the infant’s mental and physical handicaps are overwhelming, it would be inhumane to provide
life-extending care and to salvage the infant to a life whose only awareness is that of pain and
suffering. On the other hand, to refuse care to a child on the whimsy of being dissatisfied with a
particular model is equally distasteful.
ORGAN DONATION
From the very beginning, its development has been accompanied by difficult ethical questions
in regard to when it is permissible to remove organs, who should receive them, and how it is to be
financed. The transplantation of organs from one human to another has become somewhat
commonplace. Most donors have been young adults who were in excellent health until an unexpected
and unpredictable event, such as an accident, murder, suicide, or intracranial bleed, brought on brain
death. The acceptance of brain death criteria has been critical to the successful practice of organ
donation.
Options for increasing the Supply of Salvageable Organs
Mandated choice – require all competent adults to decide and record whether they wish to
become organ donors at their death.
Presumed consent – allow the routine salvage of organs unless the donor opts out. This shifts
the responsibility of organ donation from the donor families to donors, who would be given
ample opportunity during their lifetime to object or consent.
Financial incentives – is the offering of preferred status, in which those who sign donor cards
are placed ahead of others who have not signed cards, should the need arise.
Xenografting – the ability to use animal organs as permanent replacements for failing human
organ offers a solution to the acute shortage of available organs.
Altering the current meaning of death – the use brain death as a replacement of a
cardiopulmonary standard is a relatively recent concept, which has allowed the advancement
of clinical transplantation. This would allow the harvesting of organs from individuals in a
persistent vegetative state and from anencephalic infants.
Use of condemned prisoners – organ donation from executed prisoners has generally been
deemed to be unethical unless the individual made the decisions to donate prior to conviction.
The patient must request the assistance freely and frequently after careful consideration.
The physician may act on the request only if the patient is terminally ill, with no hope of
improvement and in severe pain.
The physician must consult with another physician and file a report with the coroner.
In German-speaking Nations, they do not allow active-assisted suicide – where the physician
prescribes and administers the lethal dose. Switzerland also allows physician-assisted suicide but has
much less restrictive laws as it allows the process as long as there are no “self-seeking motives”
In Belgium, they become the second western nation to legalize physician-assisted suicide. It’s
policies are less stringent than those found in the Netherlands as physician may assist patients dying if
a patient freely expresses a wish to die on the basis of intractable and unbearable pain. The policies
have been extended to include children who with the expressed permission of their parents may
receive a lethal injection.
In United States, doctors are allowed to prescribe lethal doses of drugs to terminally ill
patients to “aid in dying” in five US states. However active euthanasia is illegal. The Oregon Death
with Dignity Act attempts to provide protections to ensure that abuses do not occur.
MERCY KILLING
A health care practitioner who deliberately hastens the death of a patient under the guise of
“mercy killing” has entered into a practice prohibited under homicide laws. Common and criminal
law regard life as sacred and inalienable and look at any premeditated killing as homicide. “Consent
and humanitarian motive” is never a defense under a law for murder.
Mercy killing as an accepted practice is not something that can be entered into lightly,
inasmuch as the act of putting someone to death- regardless of motive – involves the closure of al
future options. It rules out any possibility of unanticipated discovery of wrong diagnosis, new
treatments, spontaneous remission, or improvement as a result of continued treatment.
HOSPICE ALTERNATIVE
It is unlikely that the increased public acceptance of active euthanasia is based on any
perceived need for an extension of personal autonomy to a “right to die”. It is more likely that the
genesis for the support is the fear of a lingering and painful death, surrounded by impersonal
technicians, in a cold and unfamiliar environment. If it true, then the hospice movement may make
some arguments moot in regard to active euthanasia. The word hospice has been used since medieval
times to indicate a place of rest for the weary traveler. The best-known hospice is St. Christopher’s in
Great Britain founded by Dr. Cicely Saunders in 1967. Hospice programs are set up to provide
palliative care, abatement of pain, and an environment that encourages dignity, but they do not cure or
treat intensively. Since its inception, the hospice has ceased to be a placed and has become a concept.
The basic philosophy of hospice is that dying is a natural part of life. The hospice concept has been
very effective in dealing with the terminally ill. These are specialized units designed to reduced
suffering and provide humane care for the dying.
HUMAN ENHANCEMENT
Modifications to appearance advancement are being made in the realm of neurological
enhancement. Are there medically limits to human enhancement, when the request go beyond our
normal role as healers? This is important questions as we consider the ideas of post humanism
sometimes referred to as transhumanism.
The key to posthumanism is that the cyborg existence is not to be resisted. Post humanist do
not question the ethics of contemporary uses of technology, or at least they do not see these
developments as necessarily negative. Posthumanist embrace the future as they find the problems of
human suffering, physical limitation and death to be unacceptable. Theirs is a technopian vision of a
pain-free, unlimited, eternal humanity. The posthumanist position may be naively positive toward the
future, but it is a refreshing counterpoint view to luddism.
The ethical worries about issues such as cloning, stem cell research, genetic engineering, and
posthumanism have as much to do with the vague fear that as humans we are “playing God” and are
up to the task. Some theological viewpoints hold that mere possession of such profound knowledge is
immoral; only God should have such power. The idea is that the attempt to gain this level of
knowledge is hubris or excessive pride.