http://www.cnn.com/2003/LAW/10/22/coma.woman/index.html
Looks like they will be allowed to visit, but not be allowed info on her condition.
Looks like they will be allowed to visit, but not be allowed info on her condition.
WASHINGTON (AP)--Democrat Joe Lieberman sided Wednesday with Republican Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida for ordering a feeding tube reinserted into a brain-damaged woman, saying government must honor life.
Nevermind that the husband is the legal guardian.The woman has been unable to vote, though her parents want to preserve her life and her husband wants to end it. That's a 2-1 majority, so if we're talking democracy, the majority favors letting her live.
Clancie said:Maybe I've missed this part, but I have a question that I hope someone can answer.
Since Terry Schiavo has been like this for 13 years, why didn't the parents fight this hard to get legal guardianship of her before--or at least to insist legally that she get the kind of rehabilitation therapy that they now claim will help her?
I mean, 13 years have apparently gone by without them doing this, and yet, now....????![]()
peptoabysmal said:Imagine for a minute that the tube re-insertion was ordered by Howard Dean. Would you have just as strong an objection?
I haven't been able to find anywhere that there were any witnesses or legal documents to support Terry's husband's contention that it was Terry's wish to die under these circumstances. I am starting to side with Terry's parents on this issue. What is the harm in letting Terry live a bit longer, other than her hubby won't get his check as soon?
tamiO said:If she is truly in a PVS and she is not interacting consciously with anyone but merely reacting like a newborn baby would, then I would expect that she would have reactions to being in pain.
UnrepentantSinner said:
She shows no cerebral activity on an EEG. Even a baby shows cerebral activity on an EEG. For all intents an purposes, she's no more cognative than broccoli.
UnrepentantSinner said:
Why do the knee jerks always have to inject politics into this? This clearly is a right to die/religious issue. Well, that an parents that don't want their geranium to die...
When in doubt, kill? That sounds very scary. That most people would want to die in her situation is a huge assumption. I don't know at what point I would want death for myself. I guess I'd better figure it out and tell someone.Tony:
I would guess that most people would not want to live in such a state. So shoudlnt the default be to kill her unless there was evidence that shed want to live as a veg.
I haven't really researched all that much, just what's available on the web. I cringe at being on the side of the same people such as Operation Rescue. I don't think she should be kept alive on a machine. But, I don't consider a feeding tube a machine. She breathes on her own. Some doctors believe that she is not in a PVS, that she has some awareness.Clancie said:Denise,
You and reprise have had a really interesting debate in this thread. I have to admit that your point of view is so alien to me that I -especially- appreciate the passion and research you've put into arguing it.
I'm curious if you were actually convinced that she was really in a persistent vegitative state, if you would feel the way you do, that she should still be kept alive by a machine.
I don't think we know enough about the brain to know 100% or even 95% or whatever. But I don't know Theresa. Her family does. I believe her parents should be made her guardians as they have loved and cared for her through her entire life. Who am I to tell them that they must let go? If she is truly in a PVS she would not suffer. That's part of the definition of PVS.
Do you feel that that kind of life would still, in some way, be worthwhile? Or is it simply something that is being endured--perhaps with pain or discomfort--to no particular ends?
Both actually, but the my strongest objection is because she didn't have an advanced directive. It's all hearsay and there is nothing in writing.
I'm not sure if the main objection is that her physical condition may not be as hopeless as portrayed, or if your main objection that, without a document stating her wishes, no one has the right to make a decision for her?
We prevent the "natural death process" from taking place every day with modern medicine.
(And, if its the latter, then don't you think we -are- making the decision when we intervene and prevent a natural death process from taking place?)
I admit that I am so biased on this--both in personally not ever wanting to live like that, and in preferring to trust my husband to make the decision for me if the time came--that I appreciate your posts that really force a look at the other side, difficult as it is for me to grasp....
American said:They should set up a TerriCam. I hate searching for updates. Same thing with Roy, that tiger guy who got scratched during his Vegas show.
Denise said:
How bout they set up a DenisebeatsupAmericancam?![]()
Can't interfere with a spirtual calling can we?Felos' spiritual and professional lives intersected in a public way 12 years ago, in the case of Estelle Browning. The case gained him a reputation as the person to see when you want to let someone die.
Browning, of Dunedin, had written a living will in 1985, saying she did not want to be kept alive by artificial means if she ever became ill. A year later, she had a stroke. But the nursing home refused to stop feeding her because she was not technically brain dead. Her cousin and former roommate, Doris Herbert, asked Felos to take the case.
He wanted to see Browning for himself. She could not speak, but Felos says his spiritual side picked up on something. He says her soul cried out to his soul and asked, "Why am I still here?"
Denise said:Can I see your source for this?
"At this time, the Schindlers have not seriously contested the fact that Mrs. Schiavo's brain has suffered major, permanent damage," the court said.
The court said a neurologist who had reviewed a CAT scan of Mrs. Schiavo's brain and an EEG has testified that most, if not all, of Mrs. Schiavo's cerebral cortex -- the portion of her brain that allows for human cognition and memory -- is either "totally destroyed or damaged beyond repair."
"Although it is conceivable that extraordinary treatment might improve some of the motor functions of her brain stem or cerebellum, the Schindlers have presented no medical evidence suggesting that any new treatment ... would allow her to understand her perceptions of sight and sound or to communicate or respond cognitively to those perceptions," the court said.
She shows no cerebral activity on an EEG. Even a baby shows cerebral activity on an EEG. For all intents an purposes, she's no more cognative than broccoli.