|
A HASTENED DEATH
By
Kenneth W. Phifer
October 20, 2004
For presentation on November 14, 2004
By Lawrence Egbert at Final Exit Network Conference
In the first year of my ministry, an
older woman confided in me that she wanted to die. She was weary
of pain and helplessness. She felt diminished by being a care-receiver
rather than a care-giver. Life had no pleasure or purpose for her
other than pain relief. She was without hope. She wanted the release
of death and was not even able to help herself accomplish this.
It took eight years of misery for her yearning to become reality.
My efforts to comfort her were futile, even, as I look back now,
cruel.
Some twenty years after that I was involved
with a woman in a different congregation I was serving, Merian Frederick,
who sought out the services of Dr. Jack Kevorkian. On October 22,
1993, in the presence other son and daughter-in-law and myself and
with the assistance of Dr. Kevorkian, Merian ended her life. Her
choice to do so was made after a struggle of several years with
ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease) and with the awareness that she would
soon lose her only means of communicating with the world, the strength
in her fingers to write her thoughts on a yellow pad or tap out
a message on her computer.
I had known Merian for twelve years,
worked with her in many capacities in the church, and counseled
with her and her family on many personal issues. We had often discussed
hastened death before she first experienced the symptoms of ALS.
Within a few days of her being diagnosed, that conversation became
very practical and very personal. As her spiritual counselor, I
worked with her to be sure that every possible option was considered
and then considered again. Her family was intimately involved in
this conversation and in the eventual decision that Merian made.
Had there been a better way for Merian
to be relieved of what she viewed as pure hell-a good mind soon
to be unable to communicate because of the ruined body in which
it was housed-she would have chosen it. Having made her choice she
spent the last days of her life more happily and more purposefully
than at any time since learning the name and nature of her disease.
If I have learned no other lesson from
more than thirty years of ministry, I have certainly learned that
sometimes life is not worth living.
If we reach that point of suffering and
choose to hasten our death, we should have the best available help
to make the terminal point of life truly good and gentle for us.
This may call for professionals in health care, like doctors or
nurses or pharmacists. It is likely to involve family members and/or
close friends. Spiritual counseling is also sometimes needed. For
some people all of these will be important.
If loved ones and professionals are able
and willing to cooperate with us, the moment of our death can truly
be full of love.
I support the right of competent individuals
to choose a hastened death when the measure of their suffering goes
beyond their capacity to endure it. Five religious/spiritual principles
inform my support of hastened death.
First, mere existence is not an absolute
value.
That which exists changes, grows, deteriorates,
becomes something quite different. Value is found more in the process
than in the simple existence of any form of life. Conscious and
articulate life, human life, sometimes can choose its changes, grounding
that choice in values and meanings derived from its own life experiences.
Sometimes the change that we choose is death, an end to this existence
being preferable to a continuation of it.
Every one of the religions and philosophies
that has had a major influence on our society argues this way.
Socrates believed that death was better
than violating the law of the city of Athens, to which he had sworn
fealty.
Jews perished at Masada rather than be
enslaved.
Christians martyred themselves rather
than betray their god by bowing to a Roman deity.
There are ideals, values, principles,
and persons for which and for whom we would give up our lives if
called upon to do so. What parent would not sacrifice his/her own
life to save the life of their child? There are people who risk
their lives, and sometimes lose them, in rescuing a stranger.
By making such a choice as this, we are
at least implicitly saying that our death helps someone who is left
behind. In certain circumstances, we may regard that way of helping
another as being of higher value than our own existence.
To choose death sooner rather than later
can be an act of high moral stature. Mere existence is not an absolute
value.
The second principle is that we should
respect life.
We should rejoice in life and be glad
that we are alive. We should not give up life cheaply or quickly,
our own or others. We should live as fully as we can for as long
as we can. But there are different ways of doing this.
My friend Pansy respected life by defying
her doctors when they declared that her ninety-six-year-old kidneys
had shut down and were not going to function again. Three months
after this diagnosis, she went home. She went back to her purposeful
work of calling people who were house-bound or in nursing homes
and hospitals to cheer them up. She kept this up until her energies
gave out a year later and she died.
The Pitney VanDusens also respected life.
They loved each other over many years. They made a pact as part
of that love that they would die together. When both were of advanced
age, and one of them was in very poor health, one day they simply
lay down on their marital bed and he took her life and then his
own. They made it clear that they did not wish to live under conditions
in which they could not give but only take, conditions in which
they would only be a burden to others, conditions in which they
could only suffer. It was time for them to move on. They respected
life by ending it and making room for someone else to enjoy life.
Sometimes choosing to die is as much
a sign of respecting life as choosing to live.
A third principle is that suffering
in and of itself has no moral worth.
Those who argue that the deity gives
us pain in order to help us grow spiritually or to chastise us for
our sinfulness are missing the moral mark. How could anyone have
confidence in a deity who would cause the kind of suffering that
one can see daily in hospitals, nursing homes, and emergency rooms?
Are we to believe that a deity brought to two mothers the anguish
of losing their sons to murderers who tortured them, forced them
to have sex with each other, and then killed them? Just so the mothers
could grow spiritually? What of those young men and the terror and
humiliation of their last hours-was that because of their sinfulness?
Such views are morally monstrous.
My experience as a chaplain at the Massachusetts
Hospital School for Handicapped Children revealed to me the enormous
suffering through which some children must go. The various ailments
of these youngsters were not the consequence of their moral failings.
They were simply damnable bad luck. I could not imagine a divine
figure who would bring such anguish to these gutsy boys and girls
and their families. That they redeemed their suffering with courage
and humor and hard work did not make me or them grateful for their
pain and disability. It only made me and others more appreciative
of their endurance and their achievements.
Suffering that we have not chosen does
not in and of itself have any moral value. Disease, accident, decline,
great age do not themselves have moral worth. How we face them does.
One ethical -way of doing that is by choosing not to let that suffering
continue when it is of such magnitude that nothing else in life
matters and there is no hope of relief save in death.
Suffering is not itself moral. Only our
response to it can be moral.
The next principle is that the autonomy
of each individual must be respected.
Within the constraints of time and place
and ability, each of us can choose how to live and each of us should
be allowed to choose how we die. It is not so much that we have
a right to die, as it is that, if death does not surprise us, we
have a right to choose the moment of our letting go.
Autonomy is essential in moral action.
Autonomy means that we are informed about the conditions in which
we find ourselves and that we have legitimate options among which
to choose. Autonomy does not mean that we are coerced subtly or
overtly into one decision or another. It means that we freely make
the choice we deem best.
There is no principle in modern medical
practice more important than this one. The idea of informed consent-
required for treatment and for research involving human beings-is
grounded in the notion of autonomy. The individual whose life or
health is at stake should decide what should and should not be done
to her, not the doctor or the nurse or the family. Their role is
to inform and support the individual in his or her free choice.
From the Nuremberg Code onward, this value of respecting the autonomy
of each person by obtaining informed consent before initiating a
medical or experimental procedure has been recognized as a fundamental
value.
No less should this be true in making
decisions that will hasten death: not starting treatment, stopping
treatment, treating pain even if the consequence is a more rapid
death, actively helping to bring about death.
Autonomy is necessary if we are to have
meaning as moral creatures. It must be as applicable in our waning
days and hours as it is when we are in full strength.
The fifth principle is that our individual
lives are imbedded in community.
It is in the connections that we make
to others that the deepest layers of meaning in our lives are revealed.
We make these connections with families, friends, colleagues, neighbors,
people who share our religious or political outlook or who enjoy
the same sport or hobby. We also make connections with people who
are different from us and who in their difference call upon us to
enlarge our vision of the human collective.
In all the major decisions of our living,
thinking about and sharing with a wider network of associations
is important for understanding the larger meaning of what we are
choosing to do.
This is especially true when it comes
to a decision about ending our lives. It is of great importance
that we begin now to talk with those we care about regarding our
feelings about death and dying. How long do we wish to live when
our condition is terminal and our suffering great? Such talk helps
us to know the impact of our decisions about how we want to die
on those "who survive us. In loving relationships, this knowledge
may sometimes, and rightly, influence the choices we make.
Preparing an Advance Medical Directive
and a Medical Durable Power of Attorney helps to clarify our views
at this moment. Such documents announce to loved ones and strangers
how we wish to confront our ending. Together with conversation,
these papers help others to understand, even if they do not agree
with us, why we have made the decision we have made.
Death and dying are in one sense the
most individual and isolating events of our lives. But in another
sense these moments are communal. The dying and death of any person
we love touches us, changes us, alters the wav life is for us. The
presence at memorial services of physicians, nurses, and other health
care workers and care-givers testifies to the fact that those who
are with us professionally in our last days are also part of our
community.
No one is an island. The death of any
of us affects all who know that person. How that death occurs is
often as significant as the fact of death.
We live and die in community.
These five principles are the basis
of my support for hastened death.
Hastened death has always been a part
of human societies. It is a more urgent issue today because of medical
knowledge and technology. Where pain can be relieved, it should
be. Where healing can occur, we can all be glad.
But the truth is that not all pain can
be managed. What right has any one of us, much less society at large,
to force people to endure grievous pain that cannot be relieved
short of total unconsciousness with no hope that this can be changed?
If a person in such a condition pleads for death, as some of us
might do, by what moral standard do we continue to refuse to give
them the help they are begging for?
A kind system of health care would recognize
that different people will make different choices in these agonizing
circumstances. A kind system of health care would make provision
for all possible choices: risky experimental procedures, hospice
care, adequate pain management, and aid in dying for those who choose
it.
Furthermore, doctors cannot always be
healers. Each of us will come to a point in life when no medical
treatment will help us, save perhaps to relieve our pain. At that
point, when our condition is terminal, what we need more than anything
else is intelligent compassion. We need people who understand the
pain in our bodies and the suffering in our souls. Compassion may
well be to give us drugs and apply therapies to make our bodies
feel better. But for some of us, compassion may well be to help
ease us into death.
Doctors already do this, and do it legally
and with the support of most religious communities. What they do
is act under the principle of the double effect. The double effect
is the principle by which doctors prescribe for pain even though
they know that the level of medication prescribed will kill the
patient. No less an opponent of active hastened death than Pope
John Paul II has put his seal of moral approval on the double effect.
"It is licit," he writes in The Gospel of Life. "
to
relieve pain by narcotics, even when the result is decreased consciousness
and a shortening of life."
This is a kindness for those whose bodies
are racked with pain, whose spirits are sore with despair, who have
no realistic hope this side of the grave, and who want relief from
their suffering. They want out of life. It is a kindness for the
families who suffer watching helplessly as their loved ones writhe
in agony.
Ultimately the question of how we die
is a spiritual issue, not a medical or legal one. Religious leaders
and other counselors can help people to think clearly about the
options available. We can give full emotional, moral, and spiritual
support to whatever decision the person before us makes. Our responsibility
is to be with people, not tell them what they must do or judge them
because their decisions do not agree with ours.
The ultimate goal is to enable every
person not carried away by sudden death to make informed choices
about what happens to them in the last stages of life. We will not
all choose the same way. There must be room for those who choose
to live even in the face of frightful pain and suffering and for
those who choose a hastened death. In this way it becomes possible
for each of us to find that even death can be meaningful.
|