July/August
2008
feature article
Choosing To Die
When life has gone on too long, some
hasten the inevitable approach of death
By Wendy Underhill
Anyone can choose to die.
It’s not easy, but we can pull the plug on life
at any time, through any of a number of admittedly gruesome
maneuvers: a sharp blade to the wrist, a handful of pills,
a pistol at the head. These are sudden, violent and private
occurrences, usually triggered by dramatic events or undertaken
by deeply troubled people. But what of those who are very
ill and living in constant pain, who see death approaching,
and wish to speed its progress—or maybe those who,
having lived and lived for a very long time, are now ready
to die? How might they hasten the inevitable, with support
from others, and without undertaking the violence of suicide?
Such was the case with Gilbert White, a professor emeritus
of geography at the University of Colorado, who chose
death by ceasing to eat or drink at the age of 94. Once
a prolific author, he no longer wrote, and his prodigious
memory was beginning to err with names, a loss he felt
acutely. Walking had become increasingly difficult, but
he had no life-limiting physical maladies, no terminal
illnesses.
For some years before his death, White had made it clear
that when he ceased to be useful to other people, he wasn’t
willing to linger. One evening in September 2006, his
widow, Claire Sheridan, brought home a packaged dinner.
White ate half of it, put down his fork, and said “I'm
just not going to eat any more,” she says. “I
thought he meant the food, so I answered 'It isn't very
good, I can hardly eat it either.'” He responded,
“No, dear, I mean anymore.” He then explained
that he hadn't been hungry for a year—he ate only
for sustenance—and that the time had come. “I
hope I have things to do on the other side,” he
said. “I've done everything I need to do here, and
I've tied up all the loose ends.” Thus he came to
his extraordinary decision, one that shocked many of his
friends who knew him as an outward-looking, people-oriented
man. White was no recluse or misanthrope, but rather a
man who focused on connections and on making the world
a better place—he didn’t a likely candidate
for hastening death.
Though Sheridan was stunned and heartbroken, she says
he seemed more like his old self after he verbalized his
decision; he was in charge again, which gave him the dignity
he needed in the process. “I knew it would be difficult
to watch him become even more frail and that it would
seem surreal, which it did,” says Sheridan. “But
Gilbert was a man of his word and a man of action. He
needed to do what he felt was right.”
From the moment of his decision, White took in only water,
one Dr. Pepper, and ice chips. The word went out to friends,
and forty or fifty visitors arrived in the next ten days
to say their goodbyes—a painful and baffling process
for most of the visitors. Sheridan remembers that she
couldn't imagine life without him, but she felt it was
his choice, not hers, and she was committed to supporting
him. She, in turn, was supported by her family and faith
community. On October 6, 2006, he died.
For some, this example of voluntary death may seem shocking,
even ethically bizarre. Catholic doctrine is especially
strong in prohibiting any choice in the matter of causing
or hastening death. Even for those who don’t have
a creed that restricts end-of-life choice as inherently
wrong, few would consider doing what White did.
But choosing to hasten death as it looms near is not uncommon,
and voluntary dehydration seems a frequent choice. Ninety-nine
year old Harry Dowson of Denver had no physical ailments
save a slowing of his gait, but “he was tired, he
was done, he was finished,” says his niece, Janet
Beardsley. “He'd lived his life, and there was nothing
that was going to kill him soon”—so he took
matters in his own hands, ceasing to eat in spite of the
vehement protests of his furious wife. He died in three
weeks. At the age of 89, Alma Gilbert planned her funeral
right down to the flowers, then stopped eating until she
expired. It took longer than she expected, and friends
were concerned that the funeral date she’d chosen
might be set too early.
What do we call it when someone stops eating, and others
support it? Until recently, the common term was “assisted
suicide,” one that was promoted—some would
say “sensationalized”—in the 1990s by
Jack Kevorkian, MD, the infamous “Dr. Death.”
After Kevorkian claimed to have helped more than 130 people
end their lives via lethal injections, he was tried and
convicted in Michigan for second-degree murder in 1999.
He served eight years of an 11- to 20-year sentence before
being released in 2007 for good behavior. Now, the more
value-neutral phrase “aid in dying” is used,
to avoid some of the stigma associated with the word “suicide.”
It’s not legal. “Assisted suicide”—the
statutory language still used--is specifically prohibited
in all but one state, Oregon. In most states, including
Colorado, a specific statute addresses assisted suicide,
and in all states, euthanasia—the deliberate causing
of another person's death for an apparently benevolent
reason—is classified as homicide.
Oregon passed its “Death with Dignity” law
in 1994 that permitted physicians to prescribe, but not
administer, life-ending medications. Previously, California
and Washington both saw comparable measures fail by narrow
margins; Oregonians learned from those campaigns how to
structure the law with sufficient safeguards to pass.
Those safeguards ensure that patients--not caregivers,
medical providers, or family members--are in full control
of the process, ostensibly preventing any malicious intent.
Specifically, the patient must make two verbal requests
separated by 15 days to the physician, plus make a written
request that is witnessed by two people who are not primary
caregivers or family members. He or she has the right
to rescind any requests, and must be able to self-administer
(that is, swallow) the medication. The patient must also
be diagnosed with a terminal illness with a life expectancy
of less than six months; the diagnosis must be certified
by a second physician, who also certifies that the person
is mentally competent; the attending physician must educate
the patient about available palliative options; and the
doctor must ask the patient to tell next-of-kin about
their request for a lethal prescription.
On the legal front, Hawaii, California, Washington, and
Vermont have seen recent attempts to pass laws similar
to Oregon's. Compassion & Choices, a nationwide, 30,000-member
non-profit organization, has advocated for such legislation,
and all laws that promote excellent end-of-life care and
the rights of the terminally ill to personally control
the dying process. Compassion and Choices is the offspring
of a merger between the Hemlock Society (aka End-of-Life
Choices) and Compassion and Dying, the two previous major
entities in the choice-in-dying movement. It now has headquarters
in Denver and Portland, Oregon.
The issue of aid in dying is now increasingly framed as
a question of personal choice at the end of life. In Colorado,
a significant end-of-life bill was enacted in 2006, when
Colorado's legislature passed, with very little opposition,
an amendment that protects physicians and others against
prosecution for manslaughter if they prescribe pain-relieving
medications to terminally ill patients--even when those
medications may shorten life. Without this protection,
doctors may have been reluctant to fully alleviate pain
for fear of prosecution. The amendment specifically bars
aid in dying.
And in May this year, a bill was passed by the Colorado
House and Senate and sent to the Governor for signature
that would allow the state's Attorney General to review
cases of hospital mergers was prompted in part by end-of-life
choices. A pending plan to transfer sponsorship for three
hospitals now managed by the Exempla Healthcare System
in the metro Denver area to the Sisters of Charity of
Leavenworth Health System, a Catholic entity, has raised
the question of whether certain medical practices, especially
those involving reproductive and end-of-life decisions,
would be continued at those hospitals.
Once the transfer is complete, these hospitals will follow
“Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health
Care Services” (ERDs) that “provide normative
guidance and ethical direction to health care providers
in a Catholic-sponsored health care setting.” One
small part of the ERDs states “The free and informed
judgment made by a competent adult patient concerning
the use or withdrawal of life-sustaining procedures should
always be respected and normally complied with, unless
it is contrary to Catholic moral teaching.” Euthanasia
or “assisted suicide” is never acceptable
under the ERDs (or under Colorado law, for that matter);
the ERDs recommend that “dying patients who request
euthanasia should receive loving care, psychological and
spiritual support, and appropriate remedies for pain and
other symptoms so that they can live with dignity until
the time of natural death.”
The ERDs are clear that pain relief is essential: “Patients
should be kept as free of pain as possible so that they
may die comfortably and with dignity, and in the place
where they wish to die.” This section has limits,
however, and those limits come into play when the “double
effect” of using medications that reduce pain and
therefore, incidentally, hasten death, are involved: “Since
a person has the right to prepare for his or her death
while fully conscious, he or she should not be deprived
of consciousness without a compelling reason. Medicines
capable of alleviating or suppressing pain may be given
to a dying person, even if this therapy may indirectly
shorten the person's life so long as the intent is not
to hasten death. Patients experiencing suffering that
cannot be alleviated should be helped to appreciate the
Christian understanding of redemptive suffering. “
Advocates from Compassion and Choices fear this means
Catholic-run hospitals will not honor some requests for
adequate pain relief from patients or their families.
The bill, if signed by the Governor, will not affect the
transfer of Exempla hospitals to the Sisters of Charity,
but would allow the Attorney General to review similar
deals in the future for “material changes”
in patient services.
How shall we die?
Whatever the legislative wrangling, voluntary or hastened
deaths are quietly happening everywhere, with and without
aid from physicians. Non-Oregonians still have options.
Some stockpile pain medications and take them all at once,
although that approach is fraught with the possibility
of failure. Others elect to give up life-extending treatments.
Art Buchwald, the acclaimed humorist, decided to stop
receiving dialysis, and opted to enter a hospice. Instead
of dying in three weeks as had been predicted, he enjoyed
several more months which culminated in one final, funny
book, Too Soon to Say Goodbye (Random House,
2006). Buchwald died on January 17, 2007.
Voluntary dehydration has the dubious merit of being available
to all, even those who can't swallow on their own or don't
have a specific medical treatment such as dialysis that
they can stop. Since it takes a sustained commitment to
reject food and drink, dehydration cannot be an impulsive
act. It also does not involve aid from others (although
comfort aid is desirable) and as such is less ethically
problematic for most people.
All of those “advantages” however, wouldn't
matter if death by voluntary dehydration were horrific.
Apparently it is not. What little research there is indicates
that death by dehydration is relatively painless and peaceful,
if not swift. Studies show that fluid deprivation near
the end of life is not agonizing, and in surprising ways
offers relief. Dehydration does entail oral discomfort--dry
lips and mouth—but this can be managed with mouth
swabs, ice chips, and careful attention.
Would anyone choose voluntary dehydration if lethal prescriptions
were available? Evidently so. A study published in the
March 6, 2003, in the New England Journal of Medicine,
showed that during the first five years of the Death with
Dignity Act in Oregon, most patients who chose to hasten
their deaths elected to use voluntary dehydration, rather
than a physician's prescription. Hospice nurses who attended
both kinds of deaths rated death by dehydration as somewhat
less painful and somewhat more peaceful than death with
the help of a physician, although both methods produced
deaths that they described as “quite good”
on average.
But just saying no to sustenance requires a stiff resolve.
John Powelson, an 87-year-old Boulderite, says “I'm
in favor of this idea generally, but every time I think
about it, I get hungry.” A natural response—and
a good explanation for why voluntary dehydration remains
a rare choice. (As an aside, his wife, Robin Powelson,
is planning on the strategy.)
As is all voluntary death. Oregon's experience with physician
aid in dying offers evidence of just how rare it is. A
study published in the September, 2007, issue of Journal
of Medical Ethics shows that fewer Oregonians avail themselves
of this option than opponents had expected: while 545
terminally ill people requested and obtained a prescription
in the 10 years since the Death With Dignity Act became
law, only 341 had chosen to swallow theirs. It seems that
one of the greatest palliative effects of the law has
been to give people peace of mind. Knowing that the option
is at hand, ready to be swallowed if the pain gets too
bad, is often all that is needed.
When the end is near.
For most of us—that is, those of us who aren't Gilbert
Whites or Art Buchwalds—all we want is a decent
quality of life as the end approaches. How do we assure
that? Experts say that we start by learning more about
end of life care. Ask your doctor for information; consult
with your minister or spiritual advisor; read some of
the many, many books that address end-of-life care. Or,
surf the 'net: a good place to start is with Caring Connections,
a website that offers a wide range of information about
end-of-life issues, including medical, financial, legal,
emotional and other issues (caringinfo.org).
Then, put your ideas down in writing. You can download
a simple worksheet from the Aging with Dignity website
(agingwithdignity.org)
called the “Five Wishes.” It’s a legal
document in 40 states, including Colorado, in which you'll
be asked to consider five main areas:
• Which person you want to make health care decisions
for you when you can't make them.
• The kind of medical treatment you want or don't
want.
• How comfortable you want to be.
• How you want people to treat you.
• What you want your loved ones to know.
Copies can be kept at your doctor's office, in clearly
marked files at home, and with close friends or family
who may be called on to produce them in the event of a
medical emergency. Then, think about the hospitals in
your area. In the event of an emergency, will you be taken
to a hospital that will honor your wishes?
Compassion & Choices has a client support line (1-800-247-7421,
compassionandchoices.org)
that can field all kinds of questions, including how to
talk to doctors or family members about your wishes, specific
laws in your area regarding palliative care and, if necessary,
what options exist for hastening your own death.
Or, search out one of the 49 hospices in Colorado (coloradohospice.org).
These organizations care for people with life-limiting
conditions in homes or in clinics, and provide not just
pain management, but life management. With this kind of
care, the last days, weeks, or months can be comfortable,
and even, for some, a satisfying chance for emotional,
spiritual, or mental resolution.
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