Daily Bread:
Could you please give the cite on the JP II quote, because most of the commentary on it that I’ve seen have stated that JP II had referred to using feeding tubes to provide nutrition to terminally ill patients as normal care which was to be differentieted from measures such as using respirators to keep terminally ill people alive.
Your Brother in Christ, Michael
I can’t give a cite on that, but I can say that at the very end, feeding tubes to the terminally ill (and even hydration) can be stopped because they are causing more harm than good.
Anecdotes (I know–plural is not data, but I’m using these to illustrate):
Anecdote 1: My maternal grandmother had lymphoma, and attempted a week of chemo (she’d been given 80% chance of cure w/ a 16 week course, and decided to go for it). After that week, she just had complication after complication, ending up hospitalized and w/ a feeding tube. Between midnight and 3am, the decision was made and the feeding tube was removed. She died at 6:40am that same morning.
See–at the very end of life, the body systems start shutting down, so that you have the food being pumped in, but nothing is going out … causing the dying person to swell and experience great discomfort when she is no longer able to benefit from the nutrients in the food. Stop & removed the feeding tube … you save the dying person considerable pain. Note that death happened in a matter of hours … this is typical of someone who is actively dying … there isn’t a number of days of lingering while starving to death (like Terri Schiavo) … the body is calling it quits and continuing to pump food in is not going to change that fact.
Anecdote 2: Friend of the family–her mother diagnosed with bladder cancer. At the very end, they discontinued IV fluids because the mother wanted to die at home instead of the hospital. She, too, was dead in hours–and not from dehydration … continuing IV fluids would have just meant pumping IV fluid in, and pumping fluid out via catheter, but she was not benefiting from even hydration. I’m not going to begrudge any dying person their wish to die at home instead of in a hospital bed … it’s such a small wish, and she may have lived for an hour more w/ continued hydration … not worth the cost of keeping her in the hospital where her visitors were limited (less than her number of children allowed in).
The thing is, in the event of illness (rather than death by trauma), the body is naturally shutting down, system by system, and there is nothing that can be done to stop this process. So the question becomes ‘do you inflict additional pain on the dying just to soothe your conscience?’
As far as a DNR–there are absolutely times when it is appropriate to have one. The stuff they do to bring someone back from cardiac arrest is very rough on a person … and it’s important to ask whether you are going through this process for the good of the dying or whether it’s simply to allow yourself to ‘feel ok’ that everything had been tried, no matter what the cost to the dying person.