Death panels! "Bah hum bug, that's just right-wing extremists rhetoric!" you say?
Read this from the Colson Center's December 22 Breakpoint Daily. This is the inevitable consequence of letting the government act as our "health insurance" company.
Curt
*********************************************
Remember when those who worried
about “death panels” were mocked? Well, it’s no joking matter now.
JOHN STONESTREET
Imagine you’re the mom or dad of
a 46-year-old former sheriff’s deputy who’s been in the hospital for two months
after a non-cancerous mass was found on his pancreas. Imagine further that your
son is on a ventilator but can still interact with you and make his wishes
known via movements of his hands or head. Imagine that in these interactions
your son has clearly said he wants to live. Then consider your son had no
health insurance when he went to the hospital, and now, a hospital “ethics
committee” has decided it’s time to pull the plug, because further treatment is
not “in the best interest of the patient.”
Unfortunately, this is not a bad
dream for Evelyn Kelly, who’s fighting desperately to save the life of her son,
Christopher Dunn.
Dunn is at Houston Methodist
Hospital. Under the Texas Advanced Directives Act, Houston Methodist has
decided to withdraw life-sustaining treatment. His mother is taking the
hospital to court, saying the law is unconstitutional. “They want to kill my
son,” Mrs. Kelly says. They say there is nothing else they can do for him, but
I don’t believe that. When they found out that Chris did not have insurance,
they said they were done.”
The Act, which was signed into
law in 1999 by then-Governor George W. Bush, allows hospitals to withdraw
life-sustaining treatments if an ethics committee agrees that further treatment
is futile. Their only responsibility to the family is a written ten-day notice.
The ethics committee for Houston Methodist gave its imprimatur earlier this
fall, and the hospital defended itself by saying, “Houston Methodist is a
faith-based, values-centered organization that strives to make the best choices
for all our patients. End-of-life decisions are never easy, but Texas law is
clear about our hospital’s responsibility in these cases.”
It’s hard to see how euthanizing
Christopher Dunn is the best choice for Christopher Dunn! In fact, in a
video distributed by Texas Right to Life, Christopher Dunn clearly indicates he
wants to live. The organization is also circulating an online petition that in
part says, “We demand that this secret and unaccountable decision-making by a
bureaucratic committee—obviously motivated by its own financial interest—be
reversed immediately so that Christopher Dunn can continue to live.” Come to
our website to see this video and sign this petition.
And there are others shocked by
the hospital’s violation of the Hippocratic Oath who have also joined the
fight. Prominent disability rights activist Mark Pickup, who is chronically ill
with degenerative multiple sclerosis, is asking Texas Governor Greg Abbott to
intervene so Christopher can be placed in another facility. As Pickup notes,
“The Governor can commute death sentences of murderers on death row. Surely he
must be able to commute the death sentence imposed on a helpless man by the
terrible Texas Advanced Directives Act!” Well, you’d think so.
But we must ask ourselves, how
did it even come to this point, where people have to appeal to governors and
so-called “hospital ethics committees” to keep hospitals from killing their
patients? You know, Chuck Colson saw all this coming. He knew that turning over
healthcare choices to the government would mean a bureaucratic
panel—potentially more interested in cutting costs than saving lives—would be
given the power over life and death.
As Chuck once said, “the only
medical choices I’m interested in are the ones I make in consultation with my
doctor and my family. Not with a government commissioner with tight budgets.’”
While U. S. citizens differ on the best way forward on providing
healthcare for the nation, the fact is we should all agree that a
hospital forcing a patient in its care to die is very, very wrong. Please come
to our website for details on how to stand for Christopher Dunn’s life, and
against a kind of death panel that, if unchecked, threatens all of us. And
please, do it today.
Who Decides to End a
Life?: Saving Christopher Dunn
Here's something we
can be proactive about when it comes to pro-life issues. Click
here to get information about signing the petition to save the life
of Christopher Dunn.
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