domingo, 1 de septiembre de 2019

BioEdge: Dutch doctor in court over euthanasia of demented woman

BioEdge: Dutch doctor in court over euthanasia of demented woman

Bioedge

Dutch doctor in court over euthanasia of demented woman
     
For the first time since legalisation in 2002, a Dutch doctor has appeared in court for performing euthanasia. Prosecutors allege that the doctor did not do enough to confirm that a demented patient still wanted to proceed with her advance directive.
In 2016 the relatives of a 74-year-old woman suffering from Alzheimer’s and two doctors decided that the time had come to carry out those instructions. They put a sedative in her coffee and a doctor commenced a lethal injection. But the woman resisted and her daughter and husband had to wrestle her down to give her the needle.
The now-retired female doctor says that she was acting cautiously. The relatives are supporting her. "The doctor freed my mother from the mental prison which she ended up in," her daughter said.
The prosecutors are not seeking a custodial sentence, but they are trying to clarify the legal status of the euthanasia of demented patients.
"A crucial question to this case is how long a doctor should continue consulting a patient with dementia, if the patient in an earlier stage already requested euthanasia," prosecution service spokeswoman Sanna van der Harg stated. "We do not doubt the doctor's honest intentions.”
According to The Guardianthe debate over euthanasia for the demented was sparked by the resignation of a medical ethicist from a regional euthanasia board last year. Berna van Baarsen said that she could no longer defend it. “It is fundamentally impossible to establish that the patient is suffering unbearably, because he can no longer explain it,” she said.
Michael Cook is editor of BioEdge
Bioedge

Nearly every week, it seems, you read about the discovery of a new gene explaining inexplicable behaviour -- internet addiction, obesity, voting conservative, voting liberal, infidelity, divorce, chocaholism, alcoholism, whatever.

I recall that a few years ago a New York judge even handed down a harsher-than-usual sentence because a defendant had a gene for viewing child pornography. The fact that the gene had not been discovered did not deter him. Someday it would be.

In short, the notion of genetic determinism seems to have a full nelson on the American imagination. So it comes as no surprise that homosexuality is believed, from North to South, and East to West, to be genetically determined. The most influential voice on this score is probably Lady Gaga, whose mega-hit “Born This Way” has been viewed about 300 million times on YouTube.

Fortunately or unfortunately, it’s looking like Lady Gaga was wrong. Researchers at MIT and Harvard’s Broad Institute have found that “it is impossible to meaningfully predict an individual’s same-sex sexual behavior from genetics”. If this study holds up, it is bound to shift the goal posts in the debate over homosexuality. Read about it below and post your comments.

 
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Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
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