
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.700245
pmid: 16948252
This article considers the controversy surrounding the removal of Terri Schiavo's feeding tube and argues for a new approach in determining treatment decisions for people in a permanent vegetative state. Examination of the duty to respect living people as persons rather than as objects reveals that people in a permanent vegetative state are particularly vulnerable under our current statutory and case law to being kept alive only in service to the interests of others. The article proposes that we replace the current legal presumption in favor of continued life support with a presumption to discontinue it for those in a permanent vegetative state and that judicial or quasi-judicial review be brought to bear on decisions in favor of continued life support, particularly tube feeding.
Adult, Brain Death, Legislation, Medical, Patient Self-Determination Act, Judicial Role, Persistent Vegetative State, Politics, Religion and Medicine, Health Law and Policy, Euthanasia, Passive, United States, Life Support Care, Enteral Nutrition, Florida, Humans, Female, Supreme Court Decisions
Adult, Brain Death, Legislation, Medical, Patient Self-Determination Act, Judicial Role, Persistent Vegetative State, Politics, Religion and Medicine, Health Law and Policy, Euthanasia, Passive, United States, Life Support Care, Enteral Nutrition, Florida, Humans, Female, Supreme Court Decisions
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