Worse Than Fiction: Euthanasia on the Rise
By John Stonestreet
If
you believe in the sacredness of human life from conception to natural
death, it’s time to watch and pray for those at the end of life, not
just the beginning.
In his novel, “Never Let Me Go,” Kazuo Ishiguro tells the
story of three young people—Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy—who are repeatedly
told, with their classmates at boarding school, that they’re special.
But it’s not until they leave school that they learn why: They’re clones
whose sole purpose for existence is to serve as organ donors.
Wikipedia describes Ishiguro’s award-winning novel as
“dystopian,” that is, one that depicts a “society, usually fictional,
that is in some important way undesirable or frightening.”
A colleague of mine pointed me to a recent story out of the UK that illustrates why dystopias are only “usually fictional.”
At the 21st European Conference on Thoracic Surgery last
May, a paper presented by a group of Belgian doctors reported on “Lung
Transplantation with Grafts Recovered From Euthanasia Donors.” Yes, you
heard me correctly.
According to the abstract, between January 2007 and
December 2012, six patients received pulmonary grafts using tissue from
euthanized donors. The abstract states that the euthanasia was carried
out “in accordance with state legislation and approval by Ethics
Committee.”
The “donors” were described as suffering “from an
unbearable neuromuscular . . . or neuropsychiatric . . . disorder” and
had expressed an “explicit wish to donate organs.”
So as not to seem too ghoulish, “Euthanasia was executed by
an independent physician in a room adjacent to the operating room in
the absence of the retrieval team.”
Or, as Wesley J. Smith summed it up, “One set of doctors
killed the patient, stepped out of the room, and another set of doctors
entered for the harvest.”
The Belgian doctors’ hope is that “More euthanasia donors are to be expected with more public awareness.”
But as Smith put it, “In a better world, increased public awareness would cause universal public revulsion.”
Unfortunately, we don’t live in that “better world.” As long as it’s voluntary, we hear, what’s the big deal? It can help others, they say. As Biola professor Scott Rae pointed out a few months back on BreakPoint this Week, euthanasia is no longer voluntary in the Netherlands, one of the first countries to embrace it. Today, they have what’s called kryptonasia, where doctors make the decision of when a patient’s life should be taken, without input from the patient or the family.
As Wesley Smith concludes, “It’s sackcloth and ashes time.”
In Belgium, where euthanasia is commonplace, double
euthanasia is also catching on. Last year, we told you about identical
twins insisting on being euthanized after learning they would go blind
and lose their independence. More recently, a couple that had been
married for 64 years took their lives together surrounded by their
family whom, it was said “supported their decision 100 percent.”
When did we become people that support suicide 100 percent?
Smith writes that, with one possible exception, he “can
think of nothing more dangerous than making mentally ill and despairing
disabled people believe their deaths have greater value than their
lives.”
That possible exception is “Having a society accept the
idea that it can benefit at the expense of people in desperate need of
care–and whose care is very expensive.”
That, I’m afraid, is where we are heading.
Last year, two Oxford professors writing in the journal
Bioethics, described a way to facilitate this “benefit.” They asked “Why
should surgeons have to wait until the patient has died?” Instead,
doctors should “anesthetize the patient and remove organs, including the
heart and lungs.
Brain death would follow removal of the heart.” This would increase both the number and quality of available organs.
Brain death would follow removal of the heart.” This would increase both the number and quality of available organs.
While “Never Let Me Go” is fiction, what I’m describing is
fact. Ishiguro’s tale makes the immorality of what’s being done to Kathy
and her friends clear. But doctors and ethicists want us to think it’s a
good thing in real life.
Sackcloth and ashes, indeed.
Editor’s note. This Breakpoint commentary appeared at http://www.breakpoint.org/bpcommentaries/entry/13/23335
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