Forced Dehydration to Death in Belgium!
By Wesley J. Smith
Belgium is what the culture of death looks like, behind the veneer of “compassion” and “choice.”
A study in the Journal of Medical Ethics found that nearly 25% of patients denied tube-supplied food and water were dehydrated to death without consent of themselves or family. From the abstract:
“Response rate was 58.4%. A decision to forgo ANH occurred in 6.6% of all deaths (4.2% withheld, 3.0% withdrawn). Being female, dying in a care home or hospital and suffering from nervous system diseases
(including dementia) or malignancies were the most important
patient-related factors positively associated with a decision to forgo
ANH.
“Physicians
indicated that the decision to forgo ANH had had some life-shortening
effects in 77% of cases. There had been no consultation with the patient
in 81%, mostly due to incapacity (coma or dementia). The family, colleague physicians and nurses were involved in decision making in 76%, 41% and 62%, respectively.”
And don’t think this isn’t widespread in active euthanasia. As we have seen in the Netherlands–where termination without request or consent is common and unpunished–once killing is accepted as an acceptable answer to human suffering, “choice” has increasingly less to do with it.
Source: NRLC News
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