¶ … Terri
On February 25, 1990, Terri Schiavo suffered from severe brain injury. She could no longer do anything for herself and was without an attorney. Her husband named Michael Schiavo was her legal guardian. Due to brain damage, Ms. Schiavo did not have the ability to swallow and was feed through a feeding tube. During that same year, she entered into a persistent vegetative state (PVS). As years passed, Mr. Schiavo, along with physical therapists, attempted to rehabilitate Ms. Schiavo but was unsuccessful. Tired of seeing his wife in such a condition, Mr. Schiavo thought that it would be in everyone's best interest, including his wife's, to unplug all life support devices and let her die. The parents of Ms. Schiavo disagreed with Mr. Schiavo's proposal; this created much hostility that was viewed by the public (Perry, Churchill, & Kirshner, 2005). This case has been the focus of medical controversy nationwide. This paper discusses the following: the ethical importance of the case and its impact on future practice, the legal ramifications of the case, the ethical principles violated in the case, and its impact on the standards of practice.
The ethical importance of this case includes issues regarding the sanctity of life, discrimination experienced by the disabled community, and the moral character of individuals empowered to make decisions about their live and well-being. Many people view this case as a struggle between the sanctity of life vs. quality of life. The main question in the Schiavo case is who decides what is right in the eye of the public. The law must preserve and support the rights to act according to one's personal morality. With that being said, living wills and durable powers of the attorney are the blatant driving forces of autonomy. By removing the issues of autonomy and liberty from the equation, the courts are the only entities left to make decisions in the best interest of the individual according to their own values, even if they no longer have the ability to communicate for themselves (Perry, Churchill, & Kirshner, 2005).
Removing Ms. Schiavo's artificial nutrition and hydration resulted in an ethical dilemma. There was much concern over the potential cascading effect that would result if people who are disabled may be perceived to have a poor quality of life and felt disregarded. While there is no general policy for what should be done to and for people living in a persistent vegetative state, the notion of liberty ought to be stressed as the fundamental issue involved, that all individuals will be able to choose for themselves and that their living wills, if in existence, will be honored (Perry, Churchill, & Kirshner, 2005).
Another ethical issue is whether or not Michael Schiavo should have had a voice in the decisions made for his wife. It was argued that he should not have had a say concerning decisions made for her because over the fifteen-year period of caring for her, he developed a relationship with another woman. Regardless of his romantic life after Ms. Schiavo's injury, his aggressive attempts to rehabilitate her cannot be ignored. Yet attempts were made to take the focus off of the decision itself and discredit the individual making the decision (Perry, Churchill, & Kirshner, 2005).
It is important to be familiar with 3 complicated terms in the Terri Schiavo case. The first is persistent vegetative state (PSV) occurs after a coma; a patient loses cognition and can only perform certain, involuntary actions on his or her own. While some describe those in a persistent vegetative state as "brain dead," in fact, the lower brain stem in PVS patients retains some reflexes and the ability to breath. "Whole brain death" is the second term. This means to have no brain activity at all. "Higher brain death" is the last term. Higher brain death occurs when the parts of the brain that is responsible for consciousness and higher reasoning stops functioning. Terri Schiavo suffered from higher brain death (Wijdicks, 2001).
Ms. Schiavo's brain was severely damaged due to lack of oxygen. She demonstrated few gross motor skills and could breathe on her own, indicating some signs of brain stem activity. Having residual reflexes provides one with the ability to open their eyes on breathe on their own. As a result, many argued that she had brain function. The definition of brain death is absolute unresponsiveness to stimuli, the absence of spontaneous muscle activity that includes respiration. Brain death is also known as cerebral death and irreversible coma (Fritz, 2005). According to traditional standards of whole-brain death, Terri was...
Terri Schiavo Case On February 25, 1990- to 26-year-old Terri Schindler Schiavo collapsed in her home and was admitted to the Northside Hospital in St. Petersburg Florida. Although her collapse was inexplicable, it would later be attributed to an eating disorder. Unfortunately Terri Schiavo was diagnosed with hypoxic encephalopathy, a "brain injury caused by oxygenation starvation to the brain." ("Timeline") Although originally claiming that he wanted to care for her for
Controversial Cases of End-of-Life Decisions For this discussion, we consider one the most controversial euthanasia case in the history of America - the case of Terri Schiavo who never regained consciousness after collapsing at her home on February 25, 1990. She died 15 years later at a hospital but her death and the preceding legal battle that the Americans witnessed regarding the removal of her feeding tube created a firestorm of
Right to Die For the last few decades, the issue of a person's right to choose the time and method of his or her own death has been one of passionate debate in the United States, with emotions running high on both sides of the controversy as the meanings of liberty and freedom of choice, the morality of taking one's own life, the ethics of people involved in such actions, and
In March of 2005, she was finally removed from life support and died thirteen days later. The case had 14 appeals, numerous motions, petitions and hearings in Florida courts, five suits in the Federal District Court; Florida legislation struck down by the Supreme Court of Florida; a subpoena by a congressional committee in an attempt to qualify Terri for witness protection; federal legislation and four denials of certiorari from
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