There’s been quite a bit of press attention on alleged euthanasia of terminally ill patients stuck in hospitals in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina came through. The Louisiana attorney general’s office is investigating several possible instances of this. Crispin Sartwell has a compelling column on the subject that puts things in perspective. Long quote starts below the fold:
But before we start prosecuting healers for making what must have been the most difficult decisions of their lives, we had better really try to imagine the circumstances they were in.
The staff at Memorial had assumed that hospitals would be the highest priority for evacuation. Instead, in one of the innumerable examples of the deep confusion and ineffectuality of the response, they were largely abandoned for days.
CNN quoted Fran Butler, a nurse manager: “It was battle conditions. It was as bad as being out in the field.” That is putting it mildly.
There was no power, and hence no monitoring or life-support equipment. The temperatures inside the hospital hovered around 110 degrees during the day. The bodies of those who had died at the hospital before the storm were decomposing. There was no running water, and routine sanitation procedures were impossible.
Family members of patients and staff and people from the neighborhood took shelter in the hospital, and they ran out of food and all other necessities.
In such conditions, terminally ill patients must have suffered immeasurably. And their caregivers must have suffered with them. They were unable to provide even basic palliative care: effective treatment for pain or relief of basic breathing, nutritional or circulatory problems, for instance.
Butler described the staff as desperate and said, “My nurses wanted to know what was the plan? Did they say to put people out of their misery? Yes. … They wanted to know how to get them out of their misery.”
Dr. Bryant King told CNN that at the point of maximum desperation, a second-floor triage area where he was working was cleared of everyone except patients, a hospital administrator and two doctors.
They prayed for guidance, and one of the physicians then produced a handful of syringes. “I don’t know what’s in the syringes. … The only thing I heard the physician say was, ‘I’m going to give you something to make you feel better,’” King said. King himself refused to participate. Forty-five patients died at Memorial Medical Center in the days following Katrina.
To prosecute doctors or nurses who may have hastened some of those deaths would be obscene. They faced conditions that we cannot really imagine, challenges to their identities and oaths as healers that were impossible to resolve. Whatever decisions they made, they made in prayer: They made in the midst of what could only have been the deepest and most tortured encounter with their own consciences.
I agree with him completely. To prosecute these doctors and nurses would be barbaric and serve no purpose whatsoever. They did what they did out of compassion, not malice.
Hat tip to Radley Balko.
Hurricane Katrina was very bad and many people lost there homes.
12 Consejos en una catastrofe por James Nolan . Son las conclusiones de este escritor de New Orlenans despu
As a Catholic, I can’t say that I support Euthanasia. However, given the extreme circumstances of the Hurricane situation, I don’t think that it would be appropriate to press charges against these healthcare providers. Any reasonable person, after watching the ones they care for suffer unneccessarily, would have wanted to do the exact same. In the wake of Katrina, those left behind to manage chaos were under intense stress, and the measures they took were rational. Looking back on the situation it may look irresponsible, but I think that in the same situation, regardless of my personal views on euthanasia, I would have been tempted to act accordingly.
On the contrary, prosecuting these medical murderers would serve the essential purpose of deterring future doctors and nurses from killing patients who have expressed no desire to die. Failing to prosecute would be barbaric, as it would deny the lives of the terminally ill equal protection under law. By the way, I am a lifelong liberal & atheist.