OK. I’ve settled down some.
Let’s see if we can put some things into perspective.
THE HUMAN SIDE:
AD is a progressive, and ultimately terminal disease. At present there is absolutely nothing that science can do to stop it. AD, if it proceeds to it’s natural end, causes the body to shut down. It begins with the higher functions and progresses inexorably through to the most basic functions until the patient forgets how to swallow and will starve to death without intervention.
I know. I watched my father go this way, and I will likely be watching my dear lady go the same way in a couple of years.
Even if there is intervention in the form of feeding tubes it is unlikely to last much longer because the body is not processing nutrients properly and eventually the patient simply stops breathing.
Now the ultimate purpose of medical treatment is to retore the body to health. Or at least a reasonable level of health which allows the patient to continue to live their life.
If a person with advanced AD is given treatment for a “curable” disease (in this case pneumonia) what is the expected outcome of the treatment? Is it to increase the patients chance at recovering? Making the patient more comfortable? Is it simply to keep the person alive a bit longer because you cannot accept the end which is already so close?
When one contracts or develops a terminal disease such as AD, we say that God has given this cross to the person and/or family. Medicine has provided us with medications that can mask the symptoms of AD and thus improve the patient’s life for many years, but these medications do not slow the progression of the disease.
There is a point in anyones life where the benefits of medical intervention must be weighed aganst the possible advantage to the patient and the wishes of the patient/family.
Once a person with AD reaches a point where they have virtually ceased to function on anything but the most basic level – breathing, swallowing, excreting, etc. There is no intervention that will improve the person’s life. No medical treatemnt that will restore health, or anything resembling health.
THE SPIRITUAL SIDE:
The goal of each Christian is to “get to heaven”
To do this we wish to serve God on earth until such time as God calls us home.
Now God calls us from this life by two main channels – disease or accident. In either case an agent is placed in our body that causes the body to cease functioning. Since this is God’s doing, who are we to interfere? Yet we do interfere, and the church supports this.
The church recognizes the good works and pure intentions of the medical profession. However, in the most basic sense, we cannot deny that any medical treatment interferes with a God created natural process.
Now if God chooses to give AD to the patient and family as a cross, who are we to say that God hasn’t also given the patient pnemonia to shorten the time of suffering? The fact is we can’t. We can only pray, and ask for guidance from Our Father in heaven. For it is to Him that we must answer, not to our family, or to our society.
So if our goal is to attain heaven after our passing, why should we wish to prolong our lives here? Why should we wish to prolong the suffering of a loved one who might be able go to our lord sooner by our loving inaction.
Yes there are many spiritual pitfalls in this, just as there are in any facet of our Christain life. We must truly pray with a loving heart to discern whether what we do is truly motivated by Love, or by some lesser, temporal desire. In this, the church can be of assistance, but only in the broadest sense, for as I said above, It is to God we must answer for what is an intensely difficult and personal decision.
In each of our lives we will reach a point where we must leave our lives in God’s hands, to do with as He will. (And/or the life of a loved one)
I know that in our own case, my mom did everything for my dad out of the purest Love. She did not place him in a nursing home, but kept him at home and cared for him herself. That means she fed him, changed his diaper and cleaned him up, bathed him, prayed with him, held his hand, and watched him passing away before her eyes every morning-noon and night for years.
She did as she was guided by God, and it was on His strength that we all relied. The family supported her in each of her decisions.
CONCLUSION:
I know that some will take issue with what I have written here, for that I can only say that I will continue to pray for guidance and hope others will do the same.
Regardless of the legal/temporal/moral/spiritual implications of all of this, this thread is a huge testament to having a living will. So that your family will know, in no uncertain terms what your wishes are. (We have ours, plus we discussed these things so I know what DW wishes are.)
To the OP, I hope that God will continue to guide and comfort your family through this trial.
Peace
James