|
WHY THE NEED FOR A "WILL TO
LIVE"?
I've heard about a number of other documents you can
sign to say you want life-saving medical treatment. Is there any
particular reason I should sign the Will to Live developed by NRLC?
While written with the best of intentions, some of
the other documents are unfortunately insufficiently protective.
Often, that is because they are written in a way that tries to set out
general ethical principles rather than the sort of very specific
directions that are essential in a legal document.
An analogy may help to make this clear. Some ethical
or religious systems hold that an employer has the duty to give an
employee a "just wage." This is fully appropriate as an
ethical principle. But what would be the effect of a legal contract
that, instead of setting out a specific dollar amount, simply stated
that the employee would get a "just wage?" From a legal
perspective, the term is so vague that it would be quite
unenforceable. What wage the employer would claim was "just"
might be far less than what the employee expected to be covered by the
term.
The same problem arises here. A widely accepted
ethical/religious perspective holds that "ordinary"
treatment ought always to be given, but "extraordinary"
treatment is optional. The difficulty with using such language in a legal
document, however, is that it is open to such a variety of
interpretations that an effort to enforce it meaningfully in any
concrete context would be useless. For example, there are a number of
theologians and ethicists who argue that food and water are
"extraordinary" whenever patients have certain disabilities.
It would therefore be impossible to rely on such language in court to
prevent a patient's starvation or dehydration. Of course, such a
document could go on to specify that food and water should always be
given. But that would still leave uncertain what particular medical
treatment was required or rejected by the document.
That is why the Will to Live is careful to be very
precise and specific, and why the Suggestions that accompany it urge
each signer to be equally careful in describing any treatment that is
to be foregone under any "Special Conditions."
The right to life movement used to oppose living
will legislation on the ground, among others, that living wills are
unnecessary - that patients, families and doctors can make appropriate
decisions without them. So why do we need a document like the Will to
Live?
When living will bills were first proposed in the
1970's and 1980's, the general consensus and the normal practice of
medicine favored life. Food and fluids were almost always provided
patients as a matter of course, and life-saving medical treatment was
normally provided unless patients were terminally ill and in the final
stage of the dying process. Pro-life groups pointed out that living
wills were unnecessary to prevent "overtreatment" in the
form of medical technology that merely prolonged the dying process,
both because the accepted standards of medical practice did not
require it and because the doctrine of informed consent enabled
patients and their families to reject it without resort to formal
written advance directives.
In opposing living will legislation, pro-life groups
pointed out the vagueness of the language of living wills, the way in
which seemingly harmless terms they used were open to a variety of
interpretations that could expand the denial of treatment they
authorized far beyond the intent of those who signed them. Pro-life
groups also warned that the strategy of "right to die"
groups was to use living wills to condition public acceptance of
assisted suicide, mercy killing, and euthanasia, replacing the
then-accepted ethic that the lives of all human beings are of equal
and inestimable dignity with the view that the value of human life
depends on its "quality."
Times have long since changed. Almost everywhere,
the pro-life movement lost its fight to prevent enactment of living
will legislation. Then, step by step, the vague language in most
living will statutes was amended to make explicit their authorization
of denial of life-saving procedures in more and more instances. Food
and water was added to medical treatment. Denial of treatment was
authorized not only for "terminal illness" (itself often
very broadly defined) but also for "irreversible conditions"
and other euphemisms for permanent disabilities. Most dangerous of
all, court after court and then state legislature after state
legislature adopted rules allowing denial of treatment and then food
and water to older people and people with disabilities who had never
signed living wills or otherwise rejected life-saving measures.
Just as pro-life groups predicted, the adoption of
living will legislation helped achieve a sea change in public
opinion--and in the practices of the medical profession. We now see
open advocacy –and implementation – of both direct killing and involuntary
denial of lifesaving treatment against the express desires of the
patient. Especially among health care providers, but also among many
in the general public, the "quality of life" ethic has
largely replaced the "equality of life" one.
The result is that we can no longer safely count on
a general respect for life to protect patients, or leave matters to be
worked out informally among doctors, patients and their families. The
hard reality is that the presumption has now shifted to favor death,
not life, for people with significant disabilities. Because these
disabilities can happen to any one of us, our relatives, or our
friends, it is now essential affirmatively to set down in writing that
should we become disabled, we do want the presumption to be for life.
Failure to sign a Will to Live is now likely to leave you or your
loved ones unprotected, at the mercy of health care providers and
courts dominated by those with very different values from a universal
respect for human life. |