The following article is from the website: Lifenews.com..
Please read and heed: this is from a nation that was once
considered “Our Lady’s Dowry.” For any
non-Catholics out there reading this, this refers to the Blessed Virgin Mary
(and of the Catholic Church) but has now become a cesspool of “assisted suicide”
and outright murder without consent, of course.
Be wary if you have to enter a hospital, for whatever reason, whether
here in the U.S., or, especially in the U.K.
God help us all.. Gene DeLalla.
The
British Supreme Court has ruled that doctors and families can revoke a
patient’s life support and withhold food and water without his or her consent
and without a court hearing.
The
decision is particularly concerning — because it comes from a nation that is
already pushing towards euthanasia. In the UK, with its government-run health
care system, doctors and hospitals are routinely giving up on patients they
believe are too far gone, even children such as Charlie Gard or Alfie Evans. In
such instances they are pressuring families to allow life support to be revoked
from patients they believe have no chance at life — even though other doctors
and medical professionals disagree.
The
ruling from the high court in Britain also comes after new reports that hundreds of patients
are being euthanized in Belgium including three
children. Leading pro-life organizations will likely see this ruling
us another step towards euthanasia and pressuring patients to end their lives
in assisted suicide.
The
ruling essentially allows doctors and families to guess what a patient might want
if no advance directive is in place — allowing patients to have their life
support and food and fluids terminated and their lives taken even if that may
not be the decision they would have wanted.
End-of-life care
can be withdrawn from patients in a permanent vegetative state without
consulting a judge, the UK’s highest court ruled today. The Supreme Court
upheld a decision that a man with an extensive brain injury, who can be
identified only as Mr Y, should be allowed to die without his family going
before a judge.
The
ruling means that, in cases where families and doctors are in agreement,
medical staff will be able to remove feeding tubes without applying to the
Court of Protection.
The
Supreme Court ruled on the case of a 52-year-old financial analyst, was from
June 2017, was in a prolonged disorder of consciousness (PDOC) after suffering
a cardiac arrest as a result of coronary artery disease.
PDOC
covers patients remaining in a coma, vegetative state and minimally conscious
state after a brain injury.
Experts
agreed it was highly improbable that Mr Y would re-emerge into consciousness
and – even if he did – he would have profound cognitive and physical disability
and always be dependent on others.
Mr Y had not drawn up any advance decision to refuse treatment
but his family were firmly of the view that he would not want to be kept alive
given the poor prognosis.
The
anti-euthanasia group Care Not Killing has expressed “concern” and
“disappointment” that the Supreme Court has removed an important safeguard from
brain-damaged patients today.
The
group informed LifeNews:
It
complains that judges have ruled that doctors should be able to withdraw food
and fluids without going to Court. The ruling will effect up to 24,000 patients
with permanent vegetative state (PVS) and minimally conscious state (MCS),
meaning they can now be effectively starved and dehydrated to death if the
medical staff and relatives agree that this is in their ‘best interests’.
People
with PVS (awake but not aware) and MCS (awake but only intermittently or
partially aware) can breathe without ventilators, but need to have food and
fluids by tube (clinically assisted nutrition and hydration or CANH).
These
patients are not imminently dying and with good care can live for many years.
Some may even regain awareness. But if CANH is withdrawn, then they will die
from dehydration and starvation within two or three weeks.
Until
last year all cases of PVS and MCS have had to go to the Court of Protection
before CANH could be withdrawn.
Dr.
Peter Saunders, Campaign Director of Care Not Killing, commented: “This is
concerning and disappointing news, because it removes an important safeguard
from those without a voice.
“The
Court of Protection did not prevent clinically assisted nutrition and hydration
or CANHbeing removed, indeed under the old rules, introduced after the Tony
Bland case in 1993 there have been over 100 such cases, but it did ensure
independent scrutiny of any application. It did this because it recognised the
emotional and financial pressure that families and clinicians can fell under.”
Saunders
continued: “In making these declarations Lady Black and the Supreme Court has
dramatically moved the goalposts on end of life decision-making. Once we accept
that death by dehydration is in some brain-damaged people’s ‘best interests’ we
are on a very slippery slope indeed.
“There
is a clear difference between turning off a ventilator on a brain-dead patient
and removing CANH from a brain-damaged patient. PVS and MCS differ from
conditions with a ‘downward trajectory’ because they are not progressive and do
not in themselves lead inevitably to death.
“The
Supreme Court has set a dangerous precedent. Taking these decisions away from
the Court of Protection removes an important layer of legislative scrutiny and
accountability and effectively weakens the law.
“It
will make it more likely that severely brain-damaged patients will be starved
or dehydrated to death in their supposed ‘best interests’ and that these
decisions will be more influenced by those who have ideological or financial
vested interests in this course of action.”
He
concluded: “Given that it costs about £100,000 per year to care for a person
with PVS or MCS the potential ‘saving’ for the NHS could be as much as £2.4
billion annually if most seek to go down this route. Given the huge and growing
financial pressure the health service is under is this really an additional
pressure, no matter how subtle we want to put medical staff and administrators
under.
“Coupled
with this are the real, demonstrable and significant uncertainties about
diagnosis and prognosis in both PVS and MCS. These have increased rather than
decreased in the last 20 years and this is why continued court oversight is
necessary.”
Meanwhile.
in Belgium, new data shows that
the number of euthanasia deaths continues to increase, euthanasia
deaths for conditions related to aging have skyrocketed and three children died
by euthanasia.
In
2016 there were 2028 reported euthanasia deaths up
from 2021 in 2015 and in 2017 there were 2309 reported euthanasia
deaths, a 14% increase from the previous year. There were 954
reported Belgian euthanasia deaths in 2010 representing a 242%
increase in 7 years.
Since
2010, Belgium has expanded euthanasia to include children, people with mental
or behavioral conditions and people who are not dying but have chronic
conditions. The data indicates that in 2016/17 there were, reportedly, 3
children who died by euthanasia, 77 people with mental or behavior conditions
and 710 people with sight loss or incontinence or conditions related to
disability or age.
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