Belgian Docs Give Selves OK to Kill ICU Patients
By Wesley J. Smith
Under the document, futile care impositions of withdrawing or withholding care are up to the medical team–whatever a patient or family may want. Moreover, in such cases, doctors are allowed to kill! From the statement (my emphasis):
This statement paper, developed by members of the Belgian Society of Intensive Care Medicine Council, is not about giving analgesics or sedative agents to combat pain or agitation, nor about the so-called double effect,
 wherein analgesics given to alleviate pain may have the adverse effect 
of shortening the dying process. The discussion here is about the administration
 of sedative agents with the direct intention of shortening the process 
of terminal palliative care in patients with no prospect of a meaningful
 recovery…
Moreover, we explain our belief in 
the concept that shortening the dying process by administering sedatives
 beyond what is needed for patient comfort can be not only acceptable 
but in many cases desirable.
And note, the patient need not be actually suffering!
Shortening the dying process with use of medication, such as analgesics/sedatives, may sometimes be appropriate, even in the absence of discomfort,
 and can actually improve the quality of dying; this approach can also 
help relatives accompany their loved one through the dying process—such a
 decision should be made with due consideration for the wishes of family
 members.
The present document applies to children as well as to adults.
It’s only logical: Once killing is accepted as an answer to human 
suffering, what constitutes “suffering” expands like an elastic band to 
include that of society and the hospital having to care for lives 
defined as meaningless. And it can even include termination when patient
 suffering isn’t present.As for choice: What’s that got to do with anything? Efficiency!
Editor’s note. This appeared on Wesley’s blog.
Source: NRLC News

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