Originally posted by myelo
Nobody is going to be starved.
Myelo,
The grounds for bringing the suit did not develop in a vacuum. Just to give you one recent "For instance" from the Telegraph:
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Hospital 'starved 11 patients to death'
By Nick Britten
(Filed: 19/01/2005)Eleven elderly patients on the same hospital ward were deliberately starved to death, an inquest was told yesterday.
The patients, all men aged between 67 and 93, died after having their food and drink needlessly withdrawn, according to relatives.
After a police investigation into the deaths, which happened between 1995-97, the Crown Prosecution Service decided that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute. Three members of the hospital staff have remained suspended on full pay for the past eight years.
The men were all terminally-ill patients suffering from dementia on the Rowsley ward at the Kingsway hospital in Derby. The 250-bed hospital was part of the South Derbyshire Mental Health Trust, providing long term psychiatric care for mainly geriatric patients.
The chairman of the inquest, the retired High Court judge Sir Richard Rougier, said that whatever the reasons behind the decision to withdraw food, the illnesses that it led to played an "inexorable progress" in their deaths.
He said that if "food and fluid was withdrawn at a time when they were perfectly capable of accepting it all because it was arbitrarily decided that it was time for them to die", it would amount to a policy that had been "totally unacceptable since the dark ages".
However, he said: "If it should transpire that food and fluids were withdrawn in good faith and in the not unreasonable belief that it was in their best interests as the lesser of two evils, committing them to die in as much comfort and dignity as possible. . . it would be grossly unfair to record a verdict other than that of death by natural causes."
Dr Claire Royston, a consultant psychiatrist, said that doctors often allow terminally ill patients to starve to death by deliberately stopping their food. She said dementia suffers often forget how to eat, leading to the risk of food going down the windpipe instead of the throats, causing choking or leading to pneumonia.
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This sort of practice has actually been going on "under the table" in the NHS for years. But what makes me most uneasy is the Judge's statement:
"If it should transpire that food and fluids were withdrawn in good faith and in the not unreasonable belief that it was in their best interests as the lesser of two evils, committing them to die in as much comfort and dignity as possible. . . it would be grossly unfair to record a verdict other than that of death by natural causes."In other words, if medical professionals determined "it was in their best interest" to be starved and dehydrated in comfort and dignity then this would be "death by natural causes". Well yeah, starve me and I naturally drop dead. But this hardly considers the two more important questions: 1) Is it right to do so? 2) Did these men want to die in this ghastly fashion? 3) Since when is death medical therapy? 4) Since when is feeding someone who can't feed themselves "treatment"? and so on...
I should comment I'm not an entirely disinterested spectator, my Grandfather's death was "accelerated" by the decisions of the staff of a UK hospital because he too was suffering from senile dementia. This was against the express wishes of his family.
- SEAGOON