CA Judge: Nursing Homes Can’t Make Medical Decisions
By Wesley J. SmithThis is very good. A California judge has ruled that it is unconstitutional to permit nursing homes to make medical decision on behalf of their incompetent patients.
From the Kaiser Health News story:
A California law allowing nursing
homes to make medical decisions on behalf of certain mentally
incompetent residents is unconstitutional, a state court ruled this
week. The law, which has been in effect more than 20 years, gave nursing
homes authority to decide residents’ medical treatment if a doctor
determined they were unable to do so and they had no one to represent
them.
Alameda County Superior Court
Judge Evelio M. Grillo wrote in the June 24 decision that the law
violates patients’ due process rights because it doesn’t require nursing
homes to notify patients they have been deemed incapacitated or to give
them the chance to object.
Grillo acknowledged the decision
is likely to “create problems” in how nursing home operate but wrote
that patients’ rights are more compelling.
“The stakes are simply too high
to hold otherwise,” the judge wrote. Any error could deprive patients of
their rights to make medical decisions that “may result in significant
consequences, including death.”
What to do? Each patient should have a duly appointed or state guardian with the legal and fiduciary obligation to make decisions on behalf of the patient’s best interests.
True, in this day when bioethical utilitarianism permeates everything, that can be a slim protection of the equal dignity and right to life of such patients. But at least the guardian will not have a potential financial conflict of interest.
By the way, Grillo is the judge who pushed for the settlement in the Jahi McMath brain death case that allowed her mother to take Jahi to New Jersey, where she remains viable to this day.
Editor’s note. This appeared on Wesley’s great blog.
Source: NRLC News
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