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Saturday, January 14, 2012, 1:25 AM
Wesley J. Smith

The Journal of the American Medical Association published an article by Douglas B. White, MD and law professor Thaddeus M. Pope, arguing that intractable futile care disputes belong in court.  (In a medical futility dispute, doctors seek to withdraw life-sustaining treatment over the objections of patient or surrogates.)

The authors set out three conflicting interests involved in what I call Futile Care Theory–as if the three carry equal weight. In my view, they emphatically do not. From “The Courts, Futility, and the Ends of Medicine” (January 11, 2012–Vol 307, No.2, no link):

Patients have an interest in receiving care consistent with their values.

Agreed. Indeed, patient values should, by far, be deemed the most compelling and weighty interest, given–as the authors concede–that medical futility decisions sound in values rather than purely medical considerations.

Physicians have an interest in not being compelled to act against their beliefs about how to best respect human dignity near life’s end.

If such an interest exists in medical futility disputes, it should be considered far less weighty than those of the patient/surrogate.  (This is a different matter then when a doctor believes a surrogate is insisting on treatment the patient did not actually want. So, let’s not get into that kind of dispute in our discussion here.)

But Wesley, people familiar with my work might say, you strongly support medical conscience rights.  Indeed, I do.  But I have also written that an exception exists when–as in medical futility disputes–“a patient’s life is at stake.”  Since the treatment would be withdrawn precisely because it is keeping the patient alive, allowing doctors to declare life-sustaining care “futile” is to really declare the patient to be futile.

Society has important interests in protecting individual rights and ensuring the fair allocation of scarce medical resources.

No. When Futile Care Theory first was espoused, we were assured it wasn’t about the money, when we always knew that, at least in part, it was.  But doctors cannot always serve society and provide patients with optimal care. When the two conflict, the patient’s interests–as the patient perceives them–must prevail over whatever responsibility a doctor may owe to society.

Besides, it is “fair” that some patients receive far more expensive interventions than most of the rest of us.  Yes, such patients are receiving a disproportionate share.  But that is due the vicissitudes of life. Indeed,  that “expensive” patient could be any one of us.  Thus, I disagree that it is unjust that the very few unfortunates among us involved in futility disputes are receiving an unjust benefit.

Some futilitarians believe that these disputes should be decided internally via hospital ethics committee administrative processes–which I have repeatedly and adamantly opposed.  But White and Pope–the latter of whom I have crossed swords with on occasion–laudably assert that these disputes belong in court, which they argue, would accrue three benefits:

  • To Encourage Intensive Communication:…”Because clinicians and families generally want to avoid going to court, preserving this possibility may encourage genuine engagement and negotiation.”‘
  • To Cast a Shadow That Allows Extrajudicial Solutions:…“Courts could provide written opinions on several different “phenotypes” of futility cases to allow similar cases to be resolved extrajudicially. There is a strong tradition of courts providing guidance to the medical profession on complex issues near the end of life.”
  • To Shine a Spotlight on an Unresolved Social Issue: “A third potentially beneficial effect of preserving the possibility of appeal to the courts is that such proceedings may focus attention on a topic that merits robust social debate.”

If I had (have) my way, most of these cases would never get to court because the burden on the those seeking to impose futile care treatment cut offs would be too high to usually prevail.

Please understand, I am not saying that it would never be right to withdraw wanted treatment, or that a court should never issue such a degree. Any one of us can conjur a scenario in which imposing increasingly painful and extreme interventions could cross the line into abuse. But these disputes do need to be decided via the rule of law, which means being heard in open court, with both sides subject to cross examination, the keeping of a public record, and the right of appeal. On that point, at least, White, Pope, and Smith agree.

6 Comments

    holyterror
    January 14th, 2012 | 9:33 am

    I like that you are calling them on the second “conflicting interest”, that of “their beliefs about how to best respect human dignity near life’s end.”

    This seems to me like a tremendous quagmire. Take it out of the realm of the futile care scenario and just try to posit a right to not have to do anything that would conflict with such a wide-ranging and ill-defined category: Do doctors abandon their patients when the patient becomes “undignified” in some way according to the doctor’s internal aesthetics? Or is belief about “respecting human dignity near life’s end” a matter of what they would like done to them? How many doctors would have any coherent, well-thought-out philosophy for this?

    [Reply]

    HistoryWriter
    January 14th, 2012 | 8:29 pm

    I agree, these kinds of disputes need to be resolved in court. However, you’ll recall that when the case of Terri Schiavo was decided in court there was no end to criticism when matters were resolved in a way that some people didn’t like. I suppose “in a perfect world” people accept a court’s decision even when they lose. Do you suppose that deciding these matters in court would make the process any less contentious?

    HW

    [Reply]

    Carol Eblen
    January 15th, 2012 | 2:22 pm

    History writer: I believe that majority of the “futility” deaths never become an issue because the patients, when competent, most often agree that the treatment would be futile when educated to the meaning of the futility in their case by a physician whom they trust is acting in their best interests.

    The process becomes contentious usually only when the surrogate family member(s) become involved. When the in-house ethics committees, who have to look at both medical futility and fiscal futility, become the educators of the surrogates and the surrogates won’t agree to shorten the life of their loved one, for both good reasons and selfish reasons, sometimes, this is when the neutral court needs to step in to protect the rights and the needs of the patient, first!– and their decisions do give guidance to the the Ethics Committees who then have a better chance of keeping disputes out of the courts.

    Professor Pope and our esteemed blog master, Wesley J. Smith, who are attorneys, understand that the “rule of law” must be protected and that there are times when the court has to step in and settle the matter to protect the rights of the individual and the rights of society.

    [Reply]

    HistoryWriter Reply:

    @Carol Eblen,

    Let them fight it out in court. No matter who wins we lawyers always manage to come out ahead. But you’ll recall that the Schiavo case took years to resolve. Who pays the bills meanwhile?

    HW

    [Reply]

    Thaddeus Pope
    January 25th, 2012 | 11:51 pm
    Jim deMaine, MD
    January 30th, 2012 | 1:12 am

    Very interesting discussion. Although my great-grandfather, grandfather, and son all went into law I somehow deviated and practiced pulmonary/critical care medicine for 39 years. Actually, that’s an overstatement because IUC’s didn’t exist when I trained, and I “grandfathered” by practical experience (plus Internal Medicine & Pulmonary Boards) to be able to sit (and fortunately pass) my Critical Care Boards when they first were offered in 1987.

    So end-of-life prolongation is still a new area of ethics and law meeting medical care at the bedside. Fortunately none of my cases (many futile) over the years ever went to court though there were hours of angst and deliberation with difficult families. I would say that “Yes of course”, law must set guidelines and boundaries and be a last court of appeal in order for all rights to be protected. Court rulings allowing the withdrawal of “life sustaining treatments” have had a huge impact. 70% of all deaths in the ICU are associated with ventilator withdrawal after all else has failed.

    But remember 99.9% of the cases will still be decided at the bedside, even with ones with serious ethical conflicts without ever having lawyers involved. Doctors are beginning to develop more skills in ethical deliberations, palliative care is growing, and there’s some glimmer that society can even talk about death and dying. Let’s hope.

    [Reply]


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