G
Godefridus
Guest
All right, I need some high-flying theological advice here for a former seminarian whose medical ethics training is bothering him.
Later this year, my girlfriend is going to get tested for the gene responsible for a much higher risk of ovarian and breast cancer in women. Her mother has just been through six chemotherapy treatments and just barely gotten out alive. So, it’s a serious issue.
Suppose she has the gene, and the risk of cancer both in her breasts and ovaries skyrockets. My question is, is the risk of cancer sufficient cause to employ the principle of totality and have either of those organs removed to save/preserve her life?
In my medical ethics course, we were taught that risk is not sufficient cause for damaging or removing healthy organs; the threat must be immanent. However, there is a complicating factor. Although breast cancer can be detected early, ovarian cancer is quite different; it can be quite advanced before it is ever detected.
My question is, isn’t there a possibility that a high-enough calculated risk would amount to an immanent threat and justify removing an organ?
Later this year, my girlfriend is going to get tested for the gene responsible for a much higher risk of ovarian and breast cancer in women. Her mother has just been through six chemotherapy treatments and just barely gotten out alive. So, it’s a serious issue.
Suppose she has the gene, and the risk of cancer both in her breasts and ovaries skyrockets. My question is, is the risk of cancer sufficient cause to employ the principle of totality and have either of those organs removed to save/preserve her life?
In my medical ethics course, we were taught that risk is not sufficient cause for damaging or removing healthy organs; the threat must be immanent. However, there is a complicating factor. Although breast cancer can be detected early, ovarian cancer is quite different; it can be quite advanced before it is ever detected.
My question is, isn’t there a possibility that a high-enough calculated risk would amount to an immanent threat and justify removing an organ?
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Actually, I took a break in writing this post, and upon reflection, I can sort of answer my own question. Destroying a healthy uterus to reduce/eliminate risk of cancer to that organ is, AFAIK, wrong. The problem is that the ethical stakes are rather high; our reasons for damaging parts of our bodies cannot rest upon differences of degree alone. Either an organ is healthy, or it is not.
At the same time I can't bring myself to argue this point with my girlfriend. Frankly I don't have the persuasion skills of angels; how do I tell a girl that she shouldn't reduce her otherwise high risk of fatal ovarian cancer to 0 because of medical ethics? :shrug: I need help. And I need a hug.