Things Christians say [but shouldn't] to the sick. « Strengthened by Grace: People mean well, but in some cases what they say to sick people is "worthless, hurtful, or simply outright wrongheaded."
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Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Assisted Suicide, Euthanasia Fail to Grasp The Value of People
Assisted Suicide, Euthanasia Fail to Grasp The Value of People | LifeNews.com: Some of the great civil rights battles of our day are being waged in Massachusetts, Vermont, Hawaii, and Montana this year. If you do not recognize those states as civil rights battlegrounds, you are not alone. While advocates for assisted suicide have targeted those states with legalization campaigns, residents may not fully appreciate what is at stake.
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Monday, June 25, 2012
Man scaled Kilimanjaro by crawling on his HANDS for seven days
It's a feat most able-bodied people would struggle to achieve - scaling one of the highest peaks on the planet. Spencer West managed it using just his hands. Daily Mail
Euthanasia: The European Court Must Rule on Two New Cases
Euthanasia: The European Court Must Rule on Two New Cases : Turtle Bay and Beyond – International Law, Policy, and Institutions: In the coming months, the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights will once again have to rule on the issues of euthanasia and assisted suicide. Two cases, currently pending, will soon be decided by the European Court of Human Rights (Koch v. Germany and Alda Gross v. Switzerland). Additionally, the Steering Committee on Bioethics of the Council of Europe is currently writing a guide for the decision making process regarding medical treatment in end of life situations, which will include instructions related to the cessation of acute care and the transition to palliative care and palliative sedation with cessation of hydration and nutrition.
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‘Right to die’?
‘Right to die’?: These incredible people found meaning in their lives, despite severe disabilities | LifeSiteNews.com: These incredible people found meaning in their lives, despite severe disabilities.
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Swiss vote brings death-peddlers into nursing homes
Swiss vote brings death-peddlers into nursing homes | LifeSiteNews.com: Citizens of the Swiss canton Vaud voted last Sunday in a referendum to bring the business of death into nursing homes and hospitals. When the new law goes into effect, doctors will be forced to comply with the demands of eligible people who request assisted suicide or face legal consequences.
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My aunt’s killer should not be an excuse to kill
My aunt’s killer should not be an excuse to kill | LifeSiteNews.com: "ALS is a ghastly disease. My aunt quickly lost her independence, and became reliant on others for the basics that we take for granted. She soon lost her ability to speak, and near the end of her life it was almost impossible for her to communicate. Through it all, her husband and the medical team continued to lavish their love and care on her to alleviate her pain and suffering as much as possible until she died. She was an individual with dignity, and was treated with dignity, despite all the indignities the disease subjected her to."
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Phony “Death Panel” Definition Won’t Make the Issue Go Away
Phony “Death Panel” Definition Won’t Make the Issue Go Away » Secondhand Smoke | A First Things Blog: The Medical Establishment continues to try and misdirect the conversation on the pending threat of “death panels” under Obamacare. They pretend it is about “end of life discussions.” . . . “Death panels” really refer to the threat of health care rationing and centralized cost/benefit bureaucracies deciding that efficacious treatments will not be covered based on quality of life invidious discrimination–as occurs already in the UK, Canada, and Oregon’s Medicaid rationing law.
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Elderly patients 'helped to die to free up beds', warns doctor
Elderly patients 'helped to die to free up beds', warns doctor - Telegraph: Professor Patrick Pullicino has claimed that doctors are using a care pathway designed to help make people's final days more comfortable as an equivalent to euthanasia. The Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP) is used in hospitals for patients who are terminally ill or are expected to die imminently. Under the pathway, doctors can withdraw treatment, food and water while patients are heavily sedated. Almost a third of patients - 130,000 - who die in hospital or under NHS care a year are on the LCP.
Christian Medical Comment: Is the NHS really killing 130,000 patients a year with the Liverpool Care Pathway?
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Christian Medical Comment: Is the NHS really killing 130,000 patients a year with the Liverpool Care Pathway?
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Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Ailing right-to-die champion fights to live
Sun News : Ailing right-to-die champion fights to live: After winning the right to die on her own terms, an emotional Gloria Taylor is now waging a battle to live. The West Kelowna resident, who suffers from Lou Gehrig's disease, is "living one day at a time" and hasn't made the decision on whether she will use the new law that allows her to have a doctor assist her in dying. "I am still here for living and I hope for a long time. When it is time it is God's will, not mine."
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Most people with locked-in syndrome do not wish to die
Most people with locked-in syndrome do not wish to die | NRL News Today: The overwhelming majority of people with severe disability–even with ‘locked-in syndrome’–do not wish to die but rather want support to live and the longer people have locked-in syndrome then generally the better they learn to cope with it and find meaning, purpose and contentment within the confines of the condition.
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Switzerland Welcomes Dr. Suicide Into Nursing Homes
Switzerland Welcomes Dr. Suicide Into Nursing Homes » Secondhand Smoke | A First Things Blog: Switzerland, which already permits suicide purveyors to make a lot of money out of suicide tourism, is now bringing self termination into nursing homes and hospitals.
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Landmark assisted suicide case raises ‘arguable grounds for appeal'
Landmark assisted suicide case raises ‘arguable grounds for appeal’ - The Globe and Mail: Gloria Taylor is the only person in Canada who can legally seek physician-assisted suicide, but a lawyer who was involved in the landmark court case says he expects other terminally ill people to apply for the same exemption.
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Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Single Payer = Long Waits for Care
Single Payer = Long Waits for Care » Secondhand Smoke | A First Things Blog: "We are often told that Canada’s single payer health system is the ideal for the USA. I once believed it. No longer. Canada rations care, occasionally by refusing coverage but mostly by loooo–ooo–ooong waits for needed tests and care. True, the country is trying to improve, but centralized control makes that tough. And now, the latest report card is in and it isn’t good."
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Loneliness in Older Persons: A Predictor of Functional Decline and Death
JAMA Network | Archives of Internal Medicine | Loneliness in Older PersonsA Predictor of Functional Decline and DeathLoneliness in Older Persons: Among participants who were older than 60 years, loneliness was a predictor of functional decline and death.
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Tim's Place restaurant takes unique approach thanks to special owner
Tim's Place restaurant takes unique approach thanks to special owner - CBS News: When Keith Harris' son Tim was born, a half-hearted smile was all he could muster. "Our pediatrician asked me if I knew what down syndrome was, and the world turned black at that moment," he told CBS News.
What a difference 26 years makes. Today, in sunny Albuquerque, you'd be hard pressed to find a more glowing father than Keith. Or a more shining example of what truly great parenting can accomplish.
Keith and wife Jeannie, who also have three typical boys, have raised them all with the same high-expectations. As a result, they're all successful. But, none are more successful than Tim, who not only lives on his own but owns his own restaurant. "He works for me," Tim said, pointing at his brother.
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What a difference 26 years makes. Today, in sunny Albuquerque, you'd be hard pressed to find a more glowing father than Keith. Or a more shining example of what truly great parenting can accomplish.
Keith and wife Jeannie, who also have three typical boys, have raised them all with the same high-expectations. As a result, they're all successful. But, none are more successful than Tim, who not only lives on his own but owns his own restaurant. "He works for me," Tim said, pointing at his brother.
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Locked-in syndrome case goes even beyond assisted suicide and seeks to establish dangerous precedent
Locked-in syndrome case goes even beyond assisted suicide and seeks to establish dangerous precedent | NRL News Today: A case of ‘locked-in syndrome’ that is appearing before the courts tomorrow goes even beyond assisted suicide and seeks to introduce euthanasia through the back door.
Tony Nicklinson is 58 and paralysed from the neck down after suffering a stroke in 2005. He is seeking legal permission for a doctor actively to end his life.
The Ministry of Justice had previously argued that the case should be struck out on the grounds that it is a matter for parliament, rather than the courts, to decide. However the case has been allowed to go forward to a High Court hearing.
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Tony Nicklinson is 58 and paralysed from the neck down after suffering a stroke in 2005. He is seeking legal permission for a doctor actively to end his life.
The Ministry of Justice had previously argued that the case should be struck out on the grounds that it is a matter for parliament, rather than the courts, to decide. However the case has been allowed to go forward to a High Court hearing.
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Waiting for our son to wake up
Waiting for our son to wake up - CNN.com: The 17-year-old is in a persistent vegetative state after a beach accident deprived his brain of oxygen for more than 15 minutes. Ryan's parents, Bret and Janine Buchanan, turned their own bedroom into a hospital ward for their eldest son. Metal shelves in the room are stocked with adult diapers, splints, catheters and syringes. Increasingly, families like the Buchanans are bringing children with complex medical needs home for long-term care.
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End-of-Life Choices Shoud Be Clearly Mapped
End-of-Life Choices Shoud Be Clearly Mapped - NYTimes.com: Robert H. Laws, a retired judge in San Francisco, and his wife, Beatrice, knew it was important to have health care directives in place to help their doctors and their two sons make wise medical decisions should they ever be unable to speak for themselves. With forms from their lawyer, they completed living wills and assigned each other as health care agents.
They dutifully checked off various boxes about not wanting artificial ventilation, tube feeding and the like. But what they did not know was how limiting and confusing those directions could be.
For example, Judge Laws said in an interview, he’d want to be ventilated temporarily if he had pneumonia and the procedure kept him alive until antibiotics kicked in and he could breathe well enough on his own. What he would not want is to be on a ventilator indefinitely, or to have his heart restarted if he had a terminal illness or would end up mentally impaired.
Nuances like these, unfortunately, escape the attention of a vast majority of people who have completed advance directives, and may also discourage others from creating directives in the first place.
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They dutifully checked off various boxes about not wanting artificial ventilation, tube feeding and the like. But what they did not know was how limiting and confusing those directions could be.
For example, Judge Laws said in an interview, he’d want to be ventilated temporarily if he had pneumonia and the procedure kept him alive until antibiotics kicked in and he could breathe well enough on his own. What he would not want is to be on a ventilator indefinitely, or to have his heart restarted if he had a terminal illness or would end up mentally impaired.
Nuances like these, unfortunately, escape the attention of a vast majority of people who have completed advance directives, and may also discourage others from creating directives in the first place.
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Do Brain Scans of Comatose Patients Reveal a Conscious State?
Do Brain Scans of Comatose Patients Reveal a Conscious State?: Scientific American: Patient 23 was only 24 years old when his life was devastated by a car accident. Alive but unresponsive, he had been languishing in what neurologists refer to as a vegetative state for five years, when a neuro-scientist and his colleagues put him into a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine and started asking him questions. Incredibly, he provided answers. A change in blood flow to certain parts of the man's injured brain convinced researchers that patient 23 was conscious and able to communicate. It was the first time that anyone had exchanged information with someone in a vegetative state.
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Monday, June 18, 2012
Canada edges closer to legalising assisted suicide
BioEdge: Canada edges closer to legalising assisted suicide: The issue of euthanasia in Canada is no longer simmering on a back burner. After the Supreme Court of British Columbia found yesterday that Criminal Code provisions which prohibit doctors from helping their patients commit suicide are unconstitutional, it is on a full, rolling boil.
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What we weren’t told about Terry Pratchett’s ‘award-winning’ euthanasia documentary
What we weren’t told about Terry Pratchett’s ‘award-winning’ euthanasia documentary | NRL News Today: Fantasy novelist Terry Pratchett won a Bafta for his ‘documentary’ Choosing To Die, in which he followed a man with motor neurone disease to Switzerland in order to film him killing himself at the Dignitas facility. The man’s wife, who was clearly very uncomfortable about the whole event, but went along with it out of deference to her husband, was prevented from comforting him as he died by one of the facility staff.
At a recent meeting where Peter Saunders of the Christian Medical Fellowship was speaking a woman told him she had always supported assisted suicide before seeing the film, but that watching it had caused her to change her mind. She now strongly opposes a change in the law.
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At a recent meeting where Peter Saunders of the Christian Medical Fellowship was speaking a woman told him she had always supported assisted suicide before seeing the film, but that watching it had caused her to change her mind. She now strongly opposes a change in the law.
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Friday, June 15, 2012
How to Identify Pain in Dementia Patients
Dementia Care – How to Identify Pain in Dementia Patients: Anyone can become a better pain detective when they know the signs.
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British Columbia Supreme Court legalizes assisted suicide and euthanasia
ALEX SCHADENBERG: BC SUPRME COURT DECISION TO LEGALIZE ASSISTED SUICIDE & EUTHANASIA, A RECIPE FOR ELDER ABUSE THAT THREATHENS THE SAFETY, SECURITY AND EQUALITY OF CANADIANS.: The BC Supreme Court released its decision in Carter v. AG Canada today. It carves exceptions into the laws allowing Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in Canada.
The Federal Parliament of Canada recently considered legalization of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in a bill that came before the House in 2010. Bill C-384 was overwhelmingly defeated based upon concerns related to the prospect of the abuse of seniors, people with disabilities, the lack of an effective national suicide prevention strategy, and the lack of access to good palliative care in Canada.
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The Federal Parliament of Canada recently considered legalization of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in a bill that came before the House in 2010. Bill C-384 was overwhelmingly defeated based upon concerns related to the prospect of the abuse of seniors, people with disabilities, the lack of an effective national suicide prevention strategy, and the lack of access to good palliative care in Canada.
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BMJ wants doctors to go soft on assisted suicide
BMJ wants doctors to go soft on assisted suicide | News | The Christian Institute: The British Medical Journal wants doctors to end their opposition to assisted suicide, but critics say it would put vulnerable patients at risk.
The BMJ is one of Britain’s leading medical journals, and its editor has called for doctors groups to adopt a ‘neutral’ stance. But other doctors have urged fellow professionals to stand firm and continue to protect elderly and disabled patients from being pressured into assisted suicide.
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The BMJ is one of Britain’s leading medical journals, and its editor has called for doctors groups to adopt a ‘neutral’ stance. But other doctors have urged fellow professionals to stand firm and continue to protect elderly and disabled patients from being pressured into assisted suicide.
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Doctors face ban on denying treatment to elderly
Doctors face ban on denying treatment to elderly - Telegraph: Nurses and carers will also face a legal duty to consider the “well-being and dignity” of the elderly. The legal ban on age discrimination in public services will come into force in October. It follows a series of shocking reports showing that older people often suffer sub-standard care and uneven treatment in the NHS and the social care system.
Editor: A ban on denying. That's hard to get your head around.
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Editor: A ban on denying. That's hard to get your head around.
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Checklist approach to be tested in end-of-life care planning
Checklist approach to be tested in end-of-life care planning - amednews.com: Medical checklists have helped improve surgical safety and eliminate bloodstream infections. Now physicians will study their effect on advance care planning for cancer patients.
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Swiss to vote on whether to allow assisted suicide groups in nursing homes
Swiss to vote on whether to allow assisted suicide groups in nursing homes | LifeSiteNews.com: On Sunday June 17, citizens in the Swiss Canton Vaud will be voting on a referendum on whether or not to allow assisted suicide groups to work within the nursing homes. Exit, the leading assisted suicide group in Switzerland, has been pushing its way into Swiss nursing homes. Exit, who are celebrating 30 years as a group, are an assisted suicide group that works by selling memberships to people who support the concept of assisted suicide and then charging fees to people when they aid their suicide death.
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Thursday, June 14, 2012
God-given Ability in Disability
God-given Ability in Disability | Radio | Joni and Friends: Often when people define disability, they speak on what a person cannot do. And although what they say may be true, we must remember the ‘ability’ in disability, because we are ‘able’ in He who is more than able.
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Group, voters challenge Massachusetts assisted suicide measure
Group, voters challenge Massachusetts assisted suicide measure | LifeSiteNews.com: A legal challenge is underway against a proposed initiative that would legalize assisted suicide in Massachusetts. More than 60 voters filed a challenge before the state Supreme Court on May 17, requesting that the initiative be amended to clarify its language. However, the Court has not held hearings on the request, and the wording is not expected to be changed.
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Right-to-die movement sees gains as world ages
Right-to-die movement sees gains as world ages | Reuters: Right-to-die activists hope more countries will allow assisted suicide or euthanasia in coming years as the world population ages, but opponents are determined to stop them, a dispute that flared ahead of competing conferences in Switzerland.
Ted Goodwin, the American president of the World Federation of Right-to-Die Societies, said the election of Socialist Francois Hollande as French president could help the euthanasia cause in Europe. Hollande has said he favors euthanasia under strict conditions. "If France falls into line, I believe Germany will also adopt it. That is a game changer in Europe," he said, noting support for reform was also gaining traction in Australia and Massachusetts. "Things are happening slowly but surely."
The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition is organizing an alternative conference on Friday to coincide with the public part of the Right-to-Die gathering in Zurich.
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Ted Goodwin, the American president of the World Federation of Right-to-Die Societies, said the election of Socialist Francois Hollande as French president could help the euthanasia cause in Europe. Hollande has said he favors euthanasia under strict conditions. "If France falls into line, I believe Germany will also adopt it. That is a game changer in Europe," he said, noting support for reform was also gaining traction in Australia and Massachusetts. "Things are happening slowly but surely."
The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition is organizing an alternative conference on Friday to coincide with the public part of the Right-to-Die gathering in Zurich.
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Wednesday, June 13, 2012
When a patient visit includes a request for prayer
When a patient visit includes a request for prayer - amednews.com: Physicians are accustomed to fielding many challenging questions from patients, but there is one query that they may find especially flummoxing, considering the delicate terrain it requires them to traverse. The question: “Doctor, will you pray with me?”
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Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Bringing the Hospital Home for the Tiniest of Patients
Bringing the Hospital Home for the Tiniest of Patients - WSJ.com: Many children, not just preemies, now are surviving conditions that were once considered insurmountable thanks to advances in technology and neonatal care. And a growing number of families are learning to manage the needs of a fragile child at home as home-care technologies become more widely available, and amid pressure on hospitals to trim costs.
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Thursday, June 7, 2012
More Seniors Being Mistreated As U.S. Population Ages
More Seniors Are Being Mistreated As Our Population Ages - US Politics Today: A 2009 study conducted by the Institute for Justice, found that as many as 11 percent of the elderly living in community settings experienced some form of physical, emotional, or sexual abuse or neglect. The Government Accountability Office has noted weakness in the government oversight of nursing homes and enforcement of state and federal safeguards meant to protect residents from potentially abusive individuals. The most recent issue of the Public Policy & Aging Report, published by the National Academy on an Aging Society, similarly found that as many as one in ten seniors over the age of 60 is suffering from some kind of abuse or neglect.
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Man sentenced for smothering his wife
ALEX SCHADENBERG: Lavery (83) sentenced to two year conditional sentence for manslaughter for smothering his wife.: Noel Lavery, 83, who was convicted of manslaughter for smothering his wife to death, was given a two year conditional sentence to be served in the community. Lavery must serve 240 community service hours while under his two year house arrest, and he must serve another 120 community service hours while serving another two years of probation.
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Only one-third of Russians support euthanasia
ALEX SCHADENBERG: Only one-third of Russians support euthanasia: A recent poll published by the Russian state-run Public Opinion Foundation found that 32% of Russians supported euthanasia, 32% of Russians oppose euthanasia and 36% had no opinion.
20% of the respondents stated that they had never heard of euthanasia. This statistic proves Alex Schadenberg's theory that certain ideas are not natural.
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20% of the respondents stated that they had never heard of euthanasia. This statistic proves Alex Schadenberg's theory that certain ideas are not natural.
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Is euthanasia for the living or the dying?
Deborah Coddington: Is euthanasia for the living or the dying? - Health - NZ Herald News: It's all very well signing up to voluntary euthanasia, but who's going to administer all these lethal injections? Who's going to get them to sip the glass of water so they can swallow their "peaceful pills" so they can "quietly slip away." That's the question nobody wants to address.
. . . [A]s I watched [my mother breathe her last], I saw that like birth, death is hard work. . . . Cheyne-Stokes breathing, what the dying do near the end, is what my mother did for two days and a night. But she wasn't in pain, she was just dying. And even though she was deeply unconscious, I have no doubt she knew we were there. When it was time, she just stopped breathing, much like when a baby is born and starts breathing. Mum peacefully took a couple of last breaths. This was death with dignity.
More than once we compared the waiting to sitting around dozing and waiting for a baby to be born. And why shouldn't it be? But now we want to sanitise death. Is this really for the person dying, or is it in truth for those still living? We want designer deaths, to go with designer births
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. . . [A]s I watched [my mother breathe her last], I saw that like birth, death is hard work. . . . Cheyne-Stokes breathing, what the dying do near the end, is what my mother did for two days and a night. But she wasn't in pain, she was just dying. And even though she was deeply unconscious, I have no doubt she knew we were there. When it was time, she just stopped breathing, much like when a baby is born and starts breathing. Mum peacefully took a couple of last breaths. This was death with dignity.
More than once we compared the waiting to sitting around dozing and waiting for a baby to be born. And why shouldn't it be? But now we want to sanitise death. Is this really for the person dying, or is it in truth for those still living? We want designer deaths, to go with designer births
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Monday, June 4, 2012
Disabled Hymn Writers
Disabled Hymn Writers Stories | Radio | Joni and Friends: Fanny Crosby, was totally blind. Joni believes her visual impairment added to the richness and depth of those words she wrote. In fact, she wrote over 6,000 hymns including “Tell Me the Story of Jesus” and (my real favorite) “To God Be the Glory.”
But she’s not alone.George Matheson he was blind and he composed, “O Love that Wilt Not Let Me Go.” “Sweet Hour of Prayer,” was written by William Walford and he was also blind. And there were other people with other disabilities who became famous hymn writers.
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But she’s not alone.George Matheson he was blind and he composed, “O Love that Wilt Not Let Me Go.” “Sweet Hour of Prayer,” was written by William Walford and he was also blind. And there were other people with other disabilities who became famous hymn writers.
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Another film with a sympathetic portrayal of euthanasia wins award
Michael Haneke's Amour, The 2012 Palme d'Or Winner, To Be Released This December - CinemaBlend.com: Amour features two 80-year-old retired music teachers. One day they learn that their daughter, who lives abroad, has had a stroke and is partially paralyzed. The couple must deal with the emotional pain that comes with the ordeal.
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The Case for Kidney Donation Before End-of-Life Care
Taylor & Francis Online :: The Case for Kidney Donation Before End-of-Life Care - The American Journal of Bioethics - Volume 12, Issue 6: Paul Morrisey argues, "Donation after cardiac death (DCD) is associated with many problems, including ischemic injury, high rates of delayed allograft function, and frequent organ discard. Furthermore, many potential DCD donors fail to progress to asystole in a manner that would enable safe organ transplantation and no organs are recovered. DCD protocols are based upon the principle that the donor must be declared dead prior to organ recovery. A new protocol is proposed whereby after a donor family agrees to withdrawal of life-sustaining treatments, premortem nephrectomy is performed in advance of end-of-life management. Since nephrectomy should not cause the donor's death, this approach satisfies the dead donor rule. The donor family's wishes are best met by organ donation, successful outcomes for the recipients, and a dignified death for the deceased. This proposal improves the likelihood of achieving these objectives."
The tricky question is whether the operation causes death. Morrissey says No. But critics have been scathing: “Bilateral donor nephrectomy will have catastrophic consequences on survivors of erroneous prediction of poor neurologic outcome or survival after [withdrawal of life support]. Morrissey's proposal violates the Hippocratic Oath of do-no-harm and the public trust in professional obligations to serve patients’ best interests.”
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The tricky question is whether the operation causes death. Morrissey says No. But critics have been scathing: “Bilateral donor nephrectomy will have catastrophic consequences on survivors of erroneous prediction of poor neurologic outcome or survival after [withdrawal of life support]. Morrissey's proposal violates the Hippocratic Oath of do-no-harm and the public trust in professional obligations to serve patients’ best interests.”
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Hospital-at-home programs for intensive-care patients spread
Hospital-at-home programs for intensive-care patients spread – USATODAY.com: Hospital-at-home programs refashion care for chronically ill patients with acute medical issues, testing traditional notions of how to treat people who become seriously ill. Only a handful of the initiatives exist, including the Albuquerque program, and programs in Honolulu, Boise New Orleans and Portland, Ore., offered through the Veterans Health Administration. The concept is getting more attention with increased pressure from the national health overhaul to improve the quality of medical care and lower costs. Hospital-at-home programs do both.
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In Rat Experiment, New Hope for Spine Injuries
In Rat Experiment, New Hope for Spine Injuries - NYTimes.com: Rats with a spinal cord injury that left their hind legs completely paralyzed learned to walk again on their own after an intensive training course that included electrical stimulation of the brain and the spine.
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Friday, June 1, 2012
Head of GPs in UK takes stand against assisted dying
BioEdge: Head of GPs in UK takes stand against assisted dying: The president of the Royal College of General Practitioners in the UK, Iona Heath, has taken a strong stand against the legalisation of assisted suicide. In an eloquent article in the BMJ she argues that campaigns in support of assisted dying rely on an excessively rosy view of society.
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Is the problem too much treatment? Or too little?
Not Dead Yet News & Commentary: Diane Coleman's Plenary Remarks at Adv. Care Planning and 'End of Life' Conference on May 31: Diane calls the disability perspective a Quest for Balance because "advance care planning has developed under the false premise that the primary or only problem is overtreatment of dying people. A balanced approach would also address the problem of undertreatment of people who may or may not be terminally ill. I want to emphasize that while the disability community may be most sensitive to this problem, it affects everyone who may find themselves on the patient end of the health care system."
She highlights a recent study in the Journal of Emergency Medicine in which researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center surveyed responses from more than 700 physicians in 34 states and found that over 50% of physicians misinterpreted a living will as having a "do not resuscitate" (DNR) order when it did not. About the same percentage over-interpreted DNR orders as meaning no treatment except "comfort care" or "end-of-life" care."
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She highlights a recent study in the Journal of Emergency Medicine in which researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center surveyed responses from more than 700 physicians in 34 states and found that over 50% of physicians misinterpreted a living will as having a "do not resuscitate" (DNR) order when it did not. About the same percentage over-interpreted DNR orders as meaning no treatment except "comfort care" or "end-of-life" care."
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Disability and the Gospel: How God Uses Our Brokenness to Display His Grace
Amazon.com: Disability and the Gospel: How God Uses Our Brokenness to Display His Grace (9781433530456): Michael S. Beates, Joni Eareckson Tada: Books: Michael Beates’s concern with disability issues began nearly 30 years ago when his eldest child was born with multiple profound disabilities. Now, as more families like Michael’s are affected by a growing number of disorders and difficulties ranging from autism to food allergies, the need for programs and paradigm shifts is greater than ever. Beates thus seeks to motivate churches to pursue ministry to children and adults with developmental disabilities. He works through key Bible passages on brokenness and disability to develop helpful principles for believers and churches, teaching them first to embrace their own brokenness and then to embrace those who are more physically and visibly broken.
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Get to Know: Lift Disability Network
LDN - About Page: "“We are a family of individuals extending Christ's love to the disability family through faith and friendship. It is our mission to lead in connecting the disability family through a collective voice of influence, innovative family support programs, and instructive learning initiatives."
Editor: Not to be confused with BFL's LIFT program for churches.
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Editor: Not to be confused with BFL's LIFT program for churches.
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Martin Luther and Childhood Disability in 16th Century Germany: What did he write? What did he say?
Independent Living Institute: Martin Luther's views on disability have been widely misapprehended and caricatured on the basis of a few items in a dubious edition of shorthand notes of conversations. His written and spoken arguments across 30 years (1517-1546) concerned with childbirth and infancy, devils, superstitions, changelings, prodigies, folly, disablement, deafness, participation in Christian sacraments, and exegesis of Biblical texts on disabled people, give a more reliable and interesting guide to his views, in the context of Luther's personal involvement with sickness, disability and practical care. Historically, European social and religious developments contained a broader range of views on disability than is commonly supposed, with some challenges for 21st century thought and practice.
Thirty national disability organizations blast "Deadly Consequences" segment of the Dr. Phil show
Thirty national disability organizations blast "Deadly Consequences" segment of the Dr. Phil show: On May 29, thirty national disability organizations lead by Not Dead Yet issued a letter to the Dr. Phil Show, criticizing its April 13th segment entitled “Deadly Consequences.” According to the letter, the segment “presented the idea that parents should be able to euthanize their children who have intellectual disabilities” and did so in “such an extremely unbalanced manner as to amount to a promotion of such a deadly proposition.”
“This segment was such a horrific assault on people with intellectual disabilities that ignoring it would be a dangerous mistake,” said Stephen Drake, Not Dead Yet’s research analyst. “Dr. Phil even brought in Kevorkian’s former attorney, Geoffrey Fieger, to explain why parents should be allowed to order a lethal injection for their disabled children.”
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“This segment was such a horrific assault on people with intellectual disabilities that ignoring it would be a dangerous mistake,” said Stephen Drake, Not Dead Yet’s research analyst. “Dr. Phil even brought in Kevorkian’s former attorney, Geoffrey Fieger, to explain why parents should be allowed to order a lethal injection for their disabled children.”
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