MDs Can’t Control Pain, Can Kill
By Wesley J. Smith
Brilliant! The same Canadian doctors who are apparently very poorly trained in palliative care, have been given a license to kill by the recent radical ruing of the country’s Supreme Court. This medical and potentially humanitarian mess is sorted through in a good column in the Toronto Star by Harvey Max Chochinov. From “Canada Failing on Palliative Care:”
Yikes! And remember, the Supreme Court case legalized both assisted
suicide and euthanasia to the dying, disabled, and mentally ill!
This means that doctors who can’t adequately care, will be allowed to kill–assuming they don’t botch it, which can definitely happen:
Some “choice.” Some “compassion.” Ah, who cares, Wesley? Brittany Maynard!
Editor’s note. This appeared at nationalreview.com.
Brilliant! The same Canadian doctors who are apparently very poorly trained in palliative care, have been given a license to kill by the recent radical ruing of the country’s Supreme Court. This medical and potentially humanitarian mess is sorted through in a good column in the Toronto Star by Harvey Max Chochinov. From “Canada Failing on Palliative Care:”
Despite the impressive strides
that palliative care has taken — in areas such as pain and symptom
management, and sensitivities to the psychosocial, existential and
spiritual challenges facing dying patients and their families — at their
time of licensure, physicians have been taught less about pain
management than those graduating from veterinary medicine.
Once in practice, most physicians
have knowledge deficiencies that can significantly impair their ability
to manage cancer pain. Doctors are also not generally well-trained to
engage in end-of-life conversations, meaning that goals of care often
remain unclear; and patients may not receive the care they want or the
opportunity to live out their final days in the place they would want to
die…
For 70 to 80 per cent of Canadians, palliative care is not available and hence, not a real choice.
This means that doctors who can’t adequately care, will be allowed to kill–assuming they don’t botch it, which can definitely happen:
In the future, how might this
kind of scenario play itself out in the many Canadian settings that do
not have adequate palliative care? There, the choices will come down to
settling for sub-optimal care; dislocating from friends and family to
seek out better care elsewhere; or, if one is so inclined, considering
medically hastened death.
We are about to become a country
that extends patients the right to a hastened death, but offers no
legislative guarantees or assurances that they will be well looked after
until they die.
Editor’s note. This appeared at nationalreview.com.
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