It is up to the patient’s advance directives and those that she or he has designated to carry them out to determine what shall be the actions performed at the end of the patient
s life.
Persons who are concerned with the morality of tubes, artificial feeding and hydration should make their views perfectly clear, both in writing and to their designated loved ones. Only one person should be responsible, not a committee, tp carry out the directives, but several persons should be designated in order, in case the first one, or the second or the third is not available. Most states have advance directives written in very clear language so that the individual can state or outline precisely how he or she wants to be treated, from full advanced support in all situations to less interventional solutions.
It is important to designate your executor in these situations, as it may not be your next of kin, who is usually your spouse, and after that your children. For ex, if these disagreed with you, you might want to choose a more distant relative or friend to execute your wishes, which need to be clearly stated. All of this should be written down, dated and witnessed before you get terminally ill, and updated from time to time.
No one likes to to this, but it is important for everyone to do it, including young people who don’t have a will. You don’t have to have a will or to be old or sick to do this. You can also do it without spending any money. Ot my knowledge it can be done online, though I don’t know the websites or the mechanism. I have always donte this when I updated my will, also when I entered a hospital for any reason.
In case you think that Obama is behind all this, it has been a requirement for a number of years that you must designate and sign an advance directive before you are electively admitted to any hospital in the United States. Before my last two surgeries, I signed the form used in Missouri, and thought it so well-written and clear that I incorporated it into my own advance directives in my home state.