Printer Friendly
The Free Library
18,914,692 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Caring at the end: how the Schiavo case undermined Catholic teaching.


The old adage that hard cases make bad law is often true, but it is also true that hard cases can help crystallize crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize  
v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es

v.tr.
1.
 fundamental moral issues. Thus, at the risk of reviving the painful passions that swirled around Terri Schiavo's death, I want to ask whether that incredibly hard case helps us identify core moral questions about end-of-life decisions.

Can we learn anything morally useful from the Schiavo case Schiavo case, the legal battles over the guardianship and rights of Theresa Maria Schindler Schiavo (1963–2005). Terri Schiavo was incapacitated and hospitalized in 1990, after she collapsed when her heart stopped beating due to a potassium imbalance, and her ? For example, was the strong, public opposition among some prominent Catholics, including some bishops, to the removal of Schiavo's feeding and hydration hydration /hy·dra·tion/ (hi-dra´shun) the absorption of or combination with water.

hy·dra·tion
n.
1. The addition of water to a chemical molecule without hydrolysis.

2.
 tubes an indication that church teaching about end-of-life care has changed?

To answer these questions, we need to look carefully at the claims of those who condemned the removal of Schiavo's feeding tube feeding tube
n.
A flexible tube that is inserted through the pharynx and into the esophagus and stomach and through which liquid food is passed.
 as morally repugnant REPUGNANT. That which is contrary to something else; a repugnant condition is one contrary to the contract itself; as, if I grant you a house and lot in fee, upon condition that you shall not aliens, the condition is repugnant and void. Bac. Ab. Conditions, L. , for behind the highly charged rhetoric that frequently accompanied such condemnations rests a core moral conviction that bears examination. Consider, for example, the claims made by various hierarchical officials and their spokespersons, both here and abroad. Bishop Robert Vasa of Baker, Oregon, said that it would be "murder" to remove Schiavo's feeding tube. Cathy Cleaver Ruse, the director of planning and information for the Prolife Office of the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB USCCB United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (Washington, DC) ), suggested that Schiavo was executed, and Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragan, the head of the Pontifical Council for Health Care, claimed that Schiavo was not allowed to die, but was killed. To put these claims in terms of traditional Catholic moral teaching, all three are, in effect, saying that removing the feeding tube from Schiavo was an act of euthanasia, which the church explicitly condemns.

To see what assumptions are embedded in the claim that Schiavo was euthanized, it is useful to consider the definition of euthanasia set out in the Vatican's 1980 Declaration on Euthanasia. According to the declaration, euthanasia is "an action or an omission which of itself or by intention causes death, in order that all suffering may in this way be eliminated. Euthanasia's terms of reference Terms of reference allude to a mutual agreement under which a command, element, or unit exercises authority or undertakes specific missions or tasks relative to another command, element, or unit. Also called TORs. , therefore, are to be found in the intention of the will and in the methods used."

Framed in this way, the Schiavo case throws into sharp relief a central moral question raised by the prospect of withdrawing a feeding tube from any patient in a persistent vegetative state persistent vegetative state: see under coma, in medicine.  (PVS PVS 1 Persistent vegetative state, see there 2. Pulmonary valve stenosis ). Do we inevitably intend death when we remove a feeding tube from a PVS patient? Many critics of the action Michael Schiavo (Terri's husband) took have wanted to answer yes. Take, for example, bioethicist Gilbert Meilaender's exchange with Robert D. Orr Robert Dunkerson Orr (November 17 1917 - March 10 2004) was an American political leader and Governor of Indiana from 1981 to 1989. He was a member of the United States Republican Party.  in the August/September 2004 issue of First Things. According to Meilaender, Christians have traditionally said that treatment may be removed from patients when the treatment is either useless or excessively burdensome. The problem in the case of PVS patients is that, almost by definition, a feeding tube cannot be burdensome to the patient, and it does not appear to be useless. As Meilaender puts it, given that a feeding tube "may preserve for years the life of this living human being," how can the treatment be said to be useless? Given that a person in a persistent vegetative state is, strictly speaking, not dying, it is hard to see how we could be merely letting that person die when we remove the feeding tube. Indeed, says Meilaender, in the circumstance of removing a feeding tube from a PVS patient, we seem not to be aiming to end a useless treatment, but to end a useless life. And this is precisely what Christians must resist.

I will come back to this point shortly, but it is important to see that Meilaender is not alone in making this argument. I suspect, for example, that something like this conviction stands behind the claims of the many Catholic commentators who cited Pope John Paul Pope John Paul is the name of two Popes of the Roman Catholic Church:
  • Pope John Paul I (1978), who named himself in honor of his predecessors, Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VI. Reigned for only 34 calendar days
  • Pope John Paul II (1978–2005), the only Polish Pope.
 II's March 2004 allocution The formal inquiry by a judge of an accused person, convicted of a crime, as to whether the person has any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him or her or as to whether the person has anything to say to the court before being sentenced.  on nutrition and hydration in opposing the removal of Schiavo's feeding tube. And, indeed, it is worth looking at the papal statement with this in mind.

Although some commentators have wanted to suggest that John Paul's remarks did not break significantly with traditional Catholic teaching, Thomas Shannon and Jim Walter have persuasively argued that the allocution (and the Vatican statements that led up to it and have flowed from it) represents a shift in Catholic teaching. According to Shannon and Walter (see Theological Studies 66, 2005), among the changes that characterize the revisionist re·vi·sion·ism  
n.
1. Advocacy of the revision of an accepted, usually long-standing view, theory, or doctrine, especially a revision of historical events and movements.

2.
 position is the view that providing artificial nutrition and hydration is obligatory. In making this claim, they point to a 1981 document from the Pontifical Council Cor Unum The Pontifical Council Cor Unum for Human and Christian Development is part of the Curia of the Roman Catholic Church. It was established by Pope Paul VI on 15 July 1971 and is based in the Palazzo San Callisto, in Piazza San Callisto, Rome. , Questions of Ethics Regarding the Fatally Ill and the Dying, and to the document Artificial Prolongation of Life by the Pontifical Academy of Life in 1985. Still, the defining statement of this shift is found in the 2004 papal allocution.

In the key passage, John Paul makes two claims. First, providing nutrition and hydration is a form of care, not a form of treatment. Second, withdrawing a feeding tube is essentially to aim at death. With regard to the second point, he said: "Death by starvation or dehydration is, in fact, the only possible outcome as a result of this withdrawal. In this sense it ends up becoming, if done knowingly and willingly, true and proper euthanasia by omission."

What should we make of this claim? The first thing to note is what is not being said. John Paul does not assert that removing a feeding tube is directly to kill the patient. In terms of the definition of euthanasia set out in the Declaration on Euthanasia, removing a feeding tube is not an action "which of itself" causes death. This is important because if removing the feeding tube is not wrong per se, then, if it is wrong, it must be so because of the intention of the will in removing the tube. (Recall that the declaration defines euthanasia in reference to "the intention of the will and in the methods used.")

This distinction takes us back to Meilaender's claim that in removing a feeding tube from a PVS patient we necessarily aim at death. Is Meilaender right about this? It certainly appears to be a plausible claim. After all, as both Meilaender and John Paul note, death is the certain outcome of removing the feeding tube from a PVS patient, a patient who is not imminently dying. Yet appearances can be deceiving.

No one has diagnosed the confusion here more perceptively that Daniel Callahan in his important book, The Troubled Dream of Life. According to Callahan, modern medicine has come to see death as an enemy that must be fought by any and all means. And because medicine has been so enormously successful in combating the causes of early death and thereby lengthening the average life span, we have come increasingly to act as if death is not a natural fact of life, but a failure of human will. From a traditional fatalism fa·tal·ism  
n.
1. The doctrine that all events are predetermined by fate and are therefore unalterable.

2. Acceptance of the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable.
 in the face of the biological realities of human embodiment, we have moved to a moralism mor·al·ism  
n.
1. A conventional moral maxim or attitude.

2. The act or practice of moralizing.

3. Often undue concern for morality.
 that condemns every concession to human finite as a moral failing. Indeed, says Callahan, we have lost any sense of nature as acting independently of human choice, as if no death that could have been prevented could be anything other than the result of an intentional act.

Thus, to say that removing a feeding tube from a PVS patient is necessarily to aim at death is to conflate con·flate  
tr.v. con·flat·ed, con·flat·ing, con·flates
1. To bring together; meld or fuse: "The problems [with the biopic] include . .
 human action and natural events. It is to fail to recognize that dying is commonly associated biologically with a natural inability to eat or drink. If we do not conflate human and natural causality, it is perfectly sensible to say that a person suffering from a server brain injury who cannot eat or drink is in fact dying, even if we can intervene and postpone that dying for years. Not starting or stopping artificial nutrition and hydration in such a case is not necessarily to aim at death, though one could intend death in such circumstances.

To conclude otherwise, it seems to me, is to succumb to a sort of hubris Hubris

An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward others. A classic character flaw of a trader or investor.
 that repudiates any natural limits on human action. Callahan has captured the irony of this situation perfectly. "In the name of the sanctity of life, many who would consider themselves conservative and supporters of traditional religious values are forced into a slavery to medical possibilities, held in thrall by the false gods of technology." The irony is particularly striking in relation to the Catholic commentators (Meilaender is not Catholic) who appear to adopt the Promethean attitude toward human embodiment and finitude fin·i·tude  
n.
The quality or condition of being finite.

Noun 1. finitude - the quality of being finite
boundedness, finiteness
 that the tradition has long rejected.</p> <pre> Loose Stone in the Compass How traveling takes the eyes put them in every tree, furrow furrow /fur·row/ (fur´o) a groove or sulcus.

atrioventricular furrow  the transverse groove marking off the atria of the heart from the ventricles.
 road sign, passenger's glance till it all tenses into a forest, a forest of tight nights childish fear, and reaching black branches. Is it marking or erasing the landscape coursing miles after miles between what is, what then, and what's next? I have always felt an empathy for curbs but not so readily now that you left maybe it was road curves I traced on your body single handedly. Somewhere you must have gotten tired of our journeys folding and unfolding from skin to bed sheet till we held the hour to the peaks of our dances every time the clock's long had crossed the equator. Stars are always approached from one side of the hemisphere dream's latitude to be North and South--sky's full sight our eyes are too narrow for. What remains is what pushes on: hunger, the compass rattling its tale, loose stone fooling the magnetic truth --Jean-Mark Sens </pre> <p>There was a time when it would have been possible for Catholic writers, with the full weight of magisterial mag·is·te·ri·al  
adj.
1.
a. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a master or teacher; authoritative: a magisterial account of the history of the English language.

b.
 teaching behind them, to say that a life lived in a state of permanent unconsciousness with no apparent hope for a spiritual or social life was a terrible prospect, one that no person was obligated ob·li·gate  
tr.v. ob·li·gat·ed, ob·li·gat·ing, ob·li·gates
1. To bind, compel, or constrain by a social, legal, or moral tie. See Synonyms at force.

2. To cause to be grateful or indebted; oblige.
 to embrace. In traditional Catholic teaching about the end of life, letting nature take its course in such a case made sense, not because such a life was regarded as worthless, but because in such a circumstance we confront the limits of human powers in the face of human vulnerability.

Both the view that providing nutrition and hydration for PVS patients is morally obligatory, and the position that providing a feeding tube is a form of care and not treatment, represent a shift in Catholic teaching. Understandably, commentators who have noted this shift have sought to downplay its significance, perhaps hoping that the change will be confined to cases involving persistent vegetative states. My own view, though, is that the changes are much more profound than anyone has acknowledged. They threaten to dismantle not simply Catholic teaching on end-of-life issues but much of Catholic moral theology Catholic moral theology is a major category of doctrine in the Roman Catholic church, equivalent to a religious ethics. Moral theology encompasses Roman Catholic social teaching, Catholic medical ethics, sexual ethics, and various doctrines on individual moral virtue and moral  generally. When natural constraints on human actions are treated so cavalierly, when what we can technically do appears to determine what we ought to do, the wisdom of the tradition that recognizes the goodness of our embodied existence and the fact that mere existence is not an ultimate good, seems to have been lost. If the ordeal of the Terri Schiavo case helps us to recognize the possibility of such a loss, it will not have been in vain.

Paul Lauritzen is the director of the Program in Applied Ethics at John Carroll University The university is organized into three schools including two undergraduate colleges: the College of Arts and Sciences and the Boler School of Business, and one graduate school, each defining its own academic programs under the auspices of the Academic Vice President. .
COPYRIGHT 2006 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Terri Schiavo
Author:Lauritzen, Paul
Publication:Commonweal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 10, 2006
Words:1899
Previous Article:Fair pay: growing support for a living wage.(Short Takes)
Next Article:Making History: MUNICH' & 'SOPHIE SCHOLL: THE FINAL DAYS'.(Movie review)
Topics:



Related Articles
Why Florida's Medical Directors took a stand on the Schiavo case.(Editorial)
A Florida judge has overturned a law designed to save the life of Terri Schiavo.(The Week)(Brief Article)
Extraordinary means.(From the Editors)(Editorial)
Fallacies about the Schiavo case: the case for starving and dehydrating Terri Schiavo to death was built on hypocrisy and deception.(RIGHT TO LIFE)
Life support and choices.(PERSPECTIVE)
To feed or not to feed: Terri Schiavo and the use of artificial nutrition and fluids.(Editorial)
Taking stock: the quandary of quandary ethics.
Killing by euphemism.(THE SCHIAVO CASE)(case for ending the life of Terri Schiavo)
Reasons to live: the rational case against euthanasia.(THE SCHIAVO CASE)(Terri Schiavo)
Death by court order: what judges have wrought.(THE SCHIAVO CASE II)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles