Friday, February 5, 2010
Frontiers of Informed Consent -- Communicating with Patients in PVS
Fascinating new evidence of significant brain activity in patients thought to be in a persistent vegetative state, coming from the University of Liege, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine. Brain scans of some patients thought to be in that state showed that the patients were, when questioned by the researchers, able to imagine themselves playing tennis, walking through rooms in their own homes, and even answer detailed yes-or-no questions about his life before the accident that put him in that state. The NYT report of it quotes Dr. Joseph J. Fins, chief of the medical ethics division at Weill Cornell Medical College in NY, discussing new ethical challenges raised by this possibility of communicating with people in this state: "If you ask a patient whether he or she wants to live or die, and the answer is die, would you be convinced that that that answer is sufficient?"
Another commentator, Dr. Allan Ropper, worries: "It will now be difficult for physicians to tell families confidently that their unresponsive loved ones are not 'in there somewhere.'"
It seems to me that the Church has been suggesting this very thing all along -- it SHOULD be difficult for physicians to say this confidently to anyone.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/02/frontiers-of-informed-consent-communicating-with-patients-in-pvs.html