Title: Futility
1Futility Methods in Arguments NEJM June 15
July 5, 2007
2Rosiglitazone CV Side Effects
End point included Death, CHF, MI, UA, TIA,
amputation, etc.
3Rosiglitazone CV Side Effects
End point included Death, CHF, MI, UA, TIA,
amputation, etc.
4Why????
- -3rd line drug
- -meta-analysis wasnt that good of a study
- -studies arent convincing either way
5Also in the Journal
- Tackling Medical Futility in Texas by R.D.
Troug, a professor in medical ethics and
anesthesia at Harvard.
6GOAL
- To critically analyze Dr. Truogs perspective
article in the same manner as the Rosiglitazone
articles.
7Futility in primary care
- Prostate cancer screening?
- Mammograms/paps for a 100 yr old?
- Specialist referrals?
8Case
- Emilio Gonzales
- an 18 month old boy
- born with Leighs disease, a fatal neurometabolic
disorder - In the ICU for 5 months, when
- Hospital invoked the Texas Advance Directives
Act, which authorized the withdrawal of life
support. - Mother, Ms. Gonzales, successfully obtained
extension of deadline, but Emilio died regardless
of this extension.
9Dr. Troungs goal
- To present a case example of futility,
- Discuss the ethics behind it
- Discuss the medical-legal aspects of the Texas
Advance Directives Act. - Conclude that in such futility cases, we must
- Protect minority rights
- Tolerate the choices of patients families
- Honor the values preferences of others
10Dr. Troungs conclusion
- Protect rights of minorities against the tyranny
of the majority - Values and preferences that have life-or-death
consequencesshould be honoredwhenever possible - We should seek to enhance our capacity to
tolerate the choices of others, even when we
believe they are wrong.
11My problem
- In this short Perspective article on futility
- 1) The conclusions made by the author do not seem
to follow from his arguments. - 2) His arguments are modeled on the idea of
fundamental differences intractable
conflict imply that there are no proofs in
ethics. - 3) Use of subjectivism/Cultural Relativism in
ethics.
12What to discuss in futility cases?
- Practical matters
- breakdown of trust in the physician-patient
relationship - Poor communication
- Ethics
- Legal
13Argument 1 Values
- Format of argument??
- Utilitarian?
- No
- Sanctity of Life?
- No
- Rather he emphasizes the differences
subjectively. - Problem
- just because the physicians and family disagree
on whether or not Emilio is in pain, this does
not determine whether or not he in fact has pain - Emilio either has pain or he does not
- Pain / Dignity
- Physician
- 1) unwarranted suffering
- 2) undignified death
- Family
- 1) neuro deterioration-actually less pain
- 2) Momno matter what, Emilios life is dignified
- fundamental differences in values
14Argument 2 Expense
-
- Excessive expense, so stop Tx
- But futility cases amount to a trivial amount of
the total spent on health care
- Format
- Seems utilitarian
- Yet it seems his major point is
- High expense for an individual
- Low expense for society
- Therefore, one cannot use expense as an argument
to withdraw care from Emilio
15Argument 3 Rights
- Premise 1 Doctor has the right to refuse
- violatemoral integrity
- Premise 2 But Mom has rights too
- Conclusion to deny Tx would be
- nothing more than an assertion that the
values of the clinicians were correct while those
of Ms. Gonzales were wrong
- Format
- Not utilitarian, does not weight all
harms/benefits - Major point
- In futility/end-of-life cases, the use of
rights (like values) does not lead to a
satisfying conclusion.
16Argument 4 Social
- Social issues
- Protect rights of minorities against the tyranny
of the majority - Values and preferences that have life-or-death
consequencesshould be honoredwhenever possible - We should seek to enhance our capacity to
tolerate the choices of others, even when we
believe they are wrong.
- Overall Format
- intractable conflict
- Values, Pain, ,Rights
- Futility cases are different one does not know
what OUGHT to be done - Goes on to discuss legal routes to deal with
intractable conflict
17Problem 1 Is this consistent?
- 1) Are all futility cases based on intractable
conflict? - Anencephalic infant?
- no chance of personhood
- no meaningful interactions
- no possibilities
- must we respect a familys decision to continue
care no matter what? - Baby Theresa example if we must tolerate, honor
respect others decisions in futility cases, we
must allow apparently contradictory results in
1987, this family wanted to use an anencephalic
infant for organ donation
18Problem 2 Invalid argument
- Physician believes A ought to be done
- Patient believes B ought to be done
- A and B contradict each other
- Therefore, one cannot determine what what ought
to be done.
19Problem 2 Invalid argument
- From the mere fact that 2 disagree, does this
mean there is no objective truth? - Geography Xworld flat, yworld round, is there
no objective truth on the worlds shape? - Rosiglitazone
- Article 1 increased risk CV SE
- Article 2 no increased risk CV SE
- Can we conclude that we cannot know the risk of
CV SE?? - Does it follow there is no objective truth about
the risk of CV SE????
20Problem 3 No proof idea
- Easy
- Murder is wrong
- High cholesterol is a risk factor for MI
- Hard
- Futility, abortion
- Rosiglitazone MI, prostate cancer screening
21Problem 4 Subjectivism Cultural Relativism in
Ethics
- Popular, but dead wrong
- From the mere fact that 2 disagree, does this
mean there is no objective truth? - 1) other societies can no longer be inferior
- Slavery
- Female genital mutilation
- 2) Societys standards morality
- Apartheid
- Anti-Semitism
- 3) No moral progress
- Civil rights movement
James Rachels The Elements of Moral Philosophy
22What is Dr. Troungs argument?
- The conclusion may still be right or wrong
- Yet the conclusion does not follow from the
premises - Ethical argument? Or just a legal argument?
- Regardless, when talking about futility, these
are ethical arguments - There are methods to these arguments
23Summary
- Articles on futility/ethics need to be analyzed
with the same scrutiny that the Rosiglitazone
articles have received. - There are methods to analyze both
- 1) statistical analysis gives further insight
into Rosglitazones risk profile - 2) Analyzing ethical arguments shows
counterexamples subjectivism/Cultural
Relativism that are unacceptable
24Suggestions
- When an article reports relative risk, look at
the Absolute risk, NNH and if the end points used
are narrow - When an article discusses futility/ethics, the
arguments must - be valid
- not use subjectivism Cultural Relativism