Title: Language and Reality at the End of Life
1Language and Reality at the End of Life
- Raphael Cohen-Almagor
- University of Haifa, ISRAEL
2Every Profession Has Its Keywords That Are
Important to Help Categorize Phenomena, Save Time
and Provide a Framework for Working Together.
3The Thesis The Keywords Primarily Serve
the Physicians, at Times at the Expense of the
Patients Best Interests.
4Death With Dignity
- To have dignity means to look at oneself with
self-respect, with some sort of satisfaction.
5Quality of Life
- Positive connotations, for example, in
rehabilitation, cosmetic treatments, psychiatry,
and psychology
6- However, when dealing with end of life issues,
ethicists who support euthanasia use the term
quality of life in a negative sense more often
than in a positive one, meaning that they do not
seek to improve the patients life but to end it
7- This phrase often serves to justify the
termination of life - A subjective concept, meaning that ones quality
of life is determined by ones personal life
circumstances
8Patients in Persistent Vegetative State
- Prolonged unawareness and post-coma unawareness
(PCU) - The term vegetative dehumanizes patients and
therefore is offensive to patients and their
beloved people
9- We should strive to describe the condition
without offending patients or their beloved
people - We should not strip patients of their human and
moral characteristics
10Terminal Patients
- The doctors task is to help patients to live
when they want to continue living, not to hold a
clock over their heads and count their days - When patients are labeled terminal, doctors
send them several simultaneous negative messages
11- Not only that death is near, but also that the
medical staff are giving up, - The patients beloved people should begin the
mourning period while the patient is still alive - A difference exists between discussions among
medical staff, and discussions that involve the
patients and their beloved people
12Futility
- Means any effort to provide a benefit to a
patient that is highly likely to fail and whose
rare exceptions cannot be systematically produced
13- First, a treatment that does not produce positive
effects
14Second, it is futile to provide a radical
treatment whose side-effects outweigh the good
emerging from the treatment
15Third, it is futile to treat a disease when the
patient is suffering from another
life-threatening disease
16- Concerns about costs often underlie the appeals
to futility in the clinical setting and public
policy discussions - In public policy, the concept of futility can
sanction restrictions in the allocation of health
care resources
17- The problem is that physicians disagree about the
type of clinical evidence necessary to justify a
futility claim - What is required is a fair process approach for
determining and subsequently withholding or
withdrawing, what is felt to be futile care
18Double Effect
- Two basic presuppositions
- (1) the doctors motivation is to alleviate
suffering - (2) the treatment must be proportional to the
illness - The rule is not a necessary means to adequate
pain relief because informed consent, the degree
of suffering, and the absence of less harmful
alternatives suffice
19Brain Death
- 1) when should life support be withdrawn for the
benefit of the patient? - 2) when should life support be withdrawn for the
benefit of society? - 3) when is a patient ready to be cremated or
buried? - 4) when is it permissible to remove organs from a
patient for transplantation?
20- there is a significant disparity between the
standard tests used to make the diagnosis of
brain death and the criterion these tests are
purported to fulfill.
21Conclusions
- A need to introduce more ethics into the medical
school curriculum, equipping the medical staff
with communication skills - A need to invest more time talking with patients
and their beloved people
22- Clean the language and clarify it sincerely
- Use elaborate explanations instead of concise,
obscure or unethical terms