Prepare to be appalled. Gird your loins, you are about to
face the worst treatment for chronic depression.
Authorities in Belgium and the Netherlands have decided to
offer the severely depressed a new treatment: physician assisted
suicide. There, that will solve the problem of having recalcitrant patients!
Wesley Smith reports for National Review on Bonnie Steinbock’s
study, aptly entitled: “Physician-Assisted Death and Severe,
Treatment-Resistant Depression,” Hastings Center Report 47,
no. 5 (2017): 30–42. DOI: 10.1002/hast.768. (via Maggie’s Farm)
Of course, this is so appalling that it is probably true. To
be fair, I will quote the abstract from Steinbock’s article:
Should people suffering
from untreatable psychiatric conditions be eligible for physician-assisted
death? This is possible in Belgium and the Netherlands, where PAD for
psychiatric conditions is permitted, though rare, so long as the criteria of
due care are met. Those opposed to all instances of PAD point to Belgium
and the Netherlands as a dark warning that once PAD is legalized, restricting
it will prove impossible because safeguards, such as the requirement that a
patient be terminally ill, will inevitably be eroded or discarded. However,
some supporters respond that limiting PAD to those suffering from terminal
illness, or physical illnesses generally, is arbitrary and illogical. In
addition, precisely because such patients are not terminally ill, their
suffering may last for years, even the rest of their lives. Finally, severe
depression may not be treatable. If PAD is justifiable under some conditions—as
I shall assume in this article—then why wouldn't it be justifiable for these
patients? Why shouldn't psychiatrists who have nothing else to offer their
suffering patients be able to help them to die, if that is what they want?
Are these policies the future toward which
our civilization is lurching? Are the physicians doing this because they respect the wishes of suicidal patients? Have they asked themselves what incentive
these patients have to overcome depression when the medical profession has
pronounced them to be hopeless cases? Have they asked themselves whether they are promoting feelings of hopelessness with their own appalling attitude?
For the record, the history of psychiatry is dotted with
great new discoveries in the treatment of depression. From electroshock to
lithium to tricyclic antidepressants to SSRIs, many of these treatments have
helped people whose condition had previously been considered to be untreatable. This does not include advances in cognitive treatment and the significant
improvement shown by patients who undertake an exercise program or who get a new job.
Are these physicians willing to promise that no new treatment will be discovered next month or next year? Perhaps these physicians should examine themselves before they decide to punish their depressed patients with death.
Since depression involves feelings of detachment, social
dislocation and helplessness, a certain quantity of optimism might be more
effective than a physician’s willingness to sign a death warrant.
Sometimes what matters is finding the right therapist, one with whom the
patient makes a personal connection.
There ought to be a special place in Hell for physicians that happily declare depressed patients to be hopeless and that try to cure their hopelessness with assisted suicide.
3 comments:
9'th circle?
Death is cheaper than therapy. Bottom line "medicine".
Its the herd management approach of the Complete Lives health care model. Sometimes, it's more cost-effective to cull the weak.
Post a Comment