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Bishops approve revised directives
on withdrawal of food, water
By Nancy Frazier O'Brien
Catholic News Service
BALTIMORE (CNS) – The U.S. bishops overwhelmingly approved a revision
to the directives that guide Catholic health care facilities, clarifying
that patients with chronic conditions who are not imminently dying should
receive food and water by "medically assisted" means if they
cannot take them normally.
"In principle, there is an obligation to provide patients with food
and water, including medically assisted nutrition and hydration for those
who cannot take food orally," says the revised text of the "Ethical
and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services" prepared
by the U.S. bishops' Committee on Doctrine.
"This obligation extends to patients in chronic and presumably irreversible
conditions (e.g., the 'persistent vegetative state') who can reasonably
be expected to live indefinitely if given such care," the new text
adds.
The vote was 219-4 in favor of the revision Nov. 17, the second day of
the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops fall general assembly in Baltimore.
Bishop William E. Lori of Bridgeport, Conn., chairman of the bishops'
Committee on Doctrine, said the changes would help bishops to be "teachers
of the faith," medical practitioners to "follow the appropriate
medical protocols" and "our people when they face these difficult
decisions" for themselves or their loved ones.
Deleted from the directives was a reference to "the necessary distinctions
between questions already resolved by the magisterium and those requiring
further reflection, as, for example, the morality of withdrawing medically
assisted hydration and nutrition from a person who is in the condition
that is recognized by physicians as the 'persistent vegetative state.'"
The only substantive debate on the revised directives was about whether
to use the term "permanent vegetative state" or "persistent
vegetative state" in the document.
The committee initially accepted a recommendation from Archbishop Jerome
G. Hanus of Dubuque, Iowa, to change the word from "persistent"
to "permanent," but later reversed itself. When the archbishop
brought the matter to the floor of the bishops' meeting, asking for a
return to "permanent vegetative state," the proposal lost by
a vote of 34-186, with one abstention.
In presenting the revised text Nov. 16, Bishop Lori said the directives,
last revised in 2001, "were written long before" Pope John Paul
II's March 2004 address to an international conference on "Life-Sustaining
Treatments and the Vegetative State" and the Vatican Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith's August 2007 reply to questions raised
by the USCCB on artificial nutrition and hydration.
The current directives based their teaching on documents by "some
state Catholic conferences, individual bishops and the USCCB Committee
on Pro-Life Activities," the bishop noted.
Bishop Lori said the changes were needed "particularly since the
recent clarifications by the Holy See have rendered untenable certain
positions that have been defended by some Catholic theologian and ethicists."
Some Catholic ethicists had argued that, because doctors consider a persistent
vegetative state irreversible, artificial nutrition and hydration can
be withdrawn from those patients.
Much of the ethical discussion of the nutrition and hydration question
in recent years has focused on the case of Terri Schindler Schiavo, a
brain-damaged Florida woman whose husband successfully fought for the
right to discontinue her feeding tube. Schiavo died March 31, 2005, 13
days after doctors withdrew nutrition and hydration.
"While medically assisted nutrition and hydration are not morally
obligatory in certain cases, these forms of basic care should in principle
be provided to all patients who need them, including patients diagnosed
as being in a 'persistent vegetative state,' because even the most severely
debilitated and helpless patient retains the full dignity of a human person
and must receive ordinary and proportionate care," the revised directives
read.
"Medically assisted nutrition and hydration become morally optional
when they cannot reasonably be expected to prolong life or when they would
be 'excessively burdensome for the patient or (would) cause significant
physical discomfort, for example resulting from complications in the use
of the means employed,'" they add. "For instance, as a patient
draws close to inevitable death from an underlying progressive and fatal
condition, certain measures to provide nutrition and hydration may become
excessively burdensome and therefore not obligatory in light of their
very limited ability to prolong life or provide comfort."
The new text also deletes a reference to hydration and nutrition not being
morally obligatory "when they cannot be assimilated by a person's
body."
The revision was drawn up in collaboration with the USCCB Committee on
Pro-Life Activities and in consultation with the Task Force on Health
Care Issues, Catholic Health Association, Catholic Medical Association,
National Catholic Bioethics Center and National Catholic Partnership on
Disability, Bishop Lori said.
Sister Carol Keehan, a Daughter of Charity who is CHA president and CEO,
said in a Nov. 18 statement that the revised directive on medically assisted
nutrition and hydration "does not offer new teaching but rather reflects
existing church teaching which Catholic health care facilities have already
incorporated into their practice."
"While upholding the general obligation to provide nutrition and
hydration to patients, the revised directive also makes critical distinctions
regarding their use," she added. "It does not state that all
patients must always be provided with medically administered nutrition
and hydration."
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© Copyright 2010 Catholic Communications Corp.
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