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Title: Aging:%20Change%20and%20Adaptation


1
Aging Change and Adaptation
  • Death and Dying
  • April 8, 2003

2
Euthanasia a good death
  • Voluntary, active euthanasia at the patients
    request, a physician or someone else causes the
    persons death, for example, by administering a
    lethal injection.

3
Euthanasia Attitudes
  • When a person has a disease that cannot be
    cured, do you think doctors should be allowed by
    law to end the patients life by some painless
    means if the patient and his family request it?

4
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5
Physician-assisted suicide
  • The patient causes his/her own death, i.e.,
    commits suicide using means--usually a lethal
    dose of medication--provided by a physician
  • Euthanasia someone else causes the death
  • PAS the patient causes his/her own death

6
Suicide Attitudes
  • Do you think a person has the right to end his
    or her own life if this person has an incurable
    disease?

7
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8
Autonomy
  • A person is autonomous if he/she is
    self-governing, capable of making decisions, and
    fixing a course of action in the absence of
    controlling constraints
  • It involves self-determination, freedom,
    independence, liberty of choice and action

9
Autonomy
  • It refers to human agency free of outside
    intervention and interference.

10
Other Perspectives
  • Beneficence The ethical obligation to minimize
    pain and suffering, to reduce and remove harms,
    and to bring about benefits to an individual.
  • Nonmaleficence Do no harm
  • Justice What principles should guide the
    allocation of scarce resources?

11
Chronology of Recent Developments
  • 1991 Washingtons Initiative 119
  • Shall adult patients who are in a medically
    terminal condition be permitted to request and
    receive from a physician aid-in-dying?

12
  • Aid in dying
  • a medical service, provided in person by a
    physician,
  • that will end the life of a conscious and
    mentally competent qualified patient...

13
  • in a dignified, painless, and humane manner,
  • when requested voluntarily by the patient through
    a written directive.
  • Defeated 54-46

14
  • 1992 Californias Proposition 161
  • Shall adult patients who are in a medically
    terminal condition be permitted to request and
    receive from a physician aid-in dying?

15
  • Aid in dying
  • a medical procedure that will terminate the life
    of the qualified patient
  • in a painless, humane, and dignified manner,...

16
  • whether administered by the physician at the
    patients choice or direction or
  • whether the physician provides means to the
    patient for self-administration.

17
  • Defeated 54-46
  • 1994 Oregons Ballot Measure 16 - The Oregon
    Death with Dignity Act

18
  • Shall law allow terminally ill adult Oregon
    patients voluntary informed choice to obtain a
    physicians prescription for drugs to end life?

19
The Oregon Death with Dignity Act
  • Requirements
  • The patient must be 18, terminally ill (having
    less than 6 months to live), and an Oregon
    resident.
  • The patient must voluntarily make an oral
    request...

20
  • to the attending physician for a prescription for
    medication to end his or her life.
  • A 15-day waiting period then begins.

21
  • The attending physician makes sure the patient
    understands the diagnosis and prognosis.
  • The patient is informed of all options, including
    pain control, hospice care, and comfort care.

22
  • The attending physician also must inform the
    patient of the risks and expected result of
    taking the medication.
  • The attending physician

23
  • determines whether the patient is capable of
    making health care decisions and is acting
    voluntarily
  • encourages the patient to notify his or her next
    of kin

24
  • informs the patient that he or she can withdraw
    the request for medication at any time and in any
    manner

25
  • refers the patient to a consulting physician who
    is asked to confirm the attending physicians
    diagnosis and prognosis.

26
  • The consulting physician also decides whether the
    patient is capable of making the decision and is
    acting voluntarily.
  • If either or both physicians believe the patient
    is suffering...

27
  • from a psychiatric or psychological illness or
    depression that causes impaired judgment, the
    patient will be referred for counseling.

28
  • Once the preceding steps have been satisfied, the
    patient voluntarily signs a written request
    witnessed by two people.
  • At least one witness cannot be a relative or an
    heir of the patient.

29
  • The patient then makes a second oral request to
    the attending physician for medication to end
    his/her life.

30
  • The attending physician again informs the patient
    that he or she can withdraw the request for
    medication at any time and in any manner.

31
  • No sooner than 15 days after the first oral
    request and 48 hours after the written request,
    the patient may receive a prescription for
    medication to end his or her life.

32
  • The attending physician again verifies at this
    time that the patient is making an informed
    decision.
  • Safeguards

33
  • Immunity Physicians who prescribe medication
    for a terminally ill patient to end his or her
    life would be protected from civil or criminal
    liability. Physicians are not obligated to
    participate.

34
  • Residency requirements Only requests made by
    Oregon residents may be granted. Physicians must
    be licensed in Oregon.

35
  • Reporting requirements Each year, the Oregon
    Health Division must review a sample of records
    of deaths that occur under this law.

36
  • Effect on insurance or annuity policies A
    qualified patients act of ingesting medication
    to end his or her life will not have an effect
    upon a life, health, or accident insurance or
    annuity policy.

37
  • A qualified person who takes medication to end
    his or her own life will not have his/her
    insurance policies affected -- even if those
    policies specify that death by suicide is not
    covered.

38
  • Liabilities Coercion of a patient, altering or
    forging a request for medication or concealing a
    withdrawal of that request, with the effect of
    causing the patients death, are Class A felonies.

39
  • Passed 51-49 by a margin of 32,000 votes on Nov.
    4, 1994.
  • On Dec. 8, 1994 District Court issues a
    temporary injunction preventing the law from
    going into effect.

40
  • On Dec. 28, 1994 injunction continued
  • Surely, the first assisted suicide law in this
    country deserves a considered thoughtful
    constitutional analysis.

41
  • Aug. 3, 1995 law ruled unconstitutional
  • There is little assurance that only competent
    terminally ill persons will voluntarily die.

42
  • Some good results cannot outweigh other lives
    lost due to unconstitutional errors and abuses.

43
  • Ruling overturned in Feb., 1997 by the US Court
    of Appeals and the US Supreme Court on October
    14, 1997.

44
  • Both courts held that the persons who brought the
    challenge were not in good standing, i.e., were
    not immediately affected or threatened by the
    law.
  • Oregon legislature asks voters to vote on the
    proposed law again.

45
  • In November, 1997 the original law passed again
    by a margin of 60 to 40.

46
Oregons Physician-Assisted Suicide LawUpdate
47
Legal and LegislativeChallenges
48
Pain Relief Promotion Act
  • June 1999Introduced in U.S. House by Hyde,
    Stupak, Nickles
  • Would prohibit use of federally controlled drugs
    for PAS

49
Pain Act, cont.
  • Encourages aggressive pain management for dying
  • Would impede or stop PAS under Oregons law

50
PAS Act, cont.
  • October 27, 1999U.S. House votes 271156 to pass
    the Pain Relief Promotion Act
  • Pain Relief Promotion Act has since languished in
    the U.S. Senate and has not been reported out of
    the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and
    Pensions

51
Attorney General Ashcroft
  • Nov. 6, 2001
  • Doctors who prescribe drugs to hasten the death
    of terminally ill patients are in violation of
    the federal Controlled Substances Act.

52
Court Ruling
  • April 17, 2002
  • U.S. District Court Judge Robert Jones
  • The 11/6 directive is not entitled to deference
    under any standard and is invalid.

53
Court Ruling (cont.)
  • The fact that opposition to assisted suicide my
    be fully justified--morally, ethically,
    religiously, or otherwise--does not permit a
    federal statute to be manipulated from its true
    meaning to satisfy even a worthy goal.

54
PAS So Far
55
Oregon State Statistics
  • Patients
  • 1998-2001
  • 91 received and used lethal prescriptions
  • out of 117,896 deaths
  • 1/1,296 deaths (.08)

56
Statistics, cont.
  • Vitals
  • 44 Men
  • 47 Women
  • 97 were white
  • Median age69

57
Statistics, cont.
  • Illness
  • Cancer 70
  • ALS 7
  • COPD 7
  • Other 7

58
Statistics, cont.
  • Educational Level
  • Some high school 10
  • High school graduate 42
  • College graduate 39

59
Statistics, cont.
  • Reasons identified
  • Loss of autonomy 74
  • Inability to participate 67
  • Loss of bodily control 55
  • Burden on others 30
  • Inadequate pain control 18

60
Statistics, cont.
  • Insured
  • Private 65
  • None 1
  • Place of death
  • Home 82
  • Hospital 1

61
Statistics, cont.
  • Minutes between ingestion and unconsciousness
    median 5
  • Minutes between ingestion and death median 30

62
Vermont Death with Dignity Act
63
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