Question 5:  Where do you draw the line between a quality of life
worth preserving and the remnants of biological life
that should be mercifully shut down?

     It is extremely difficult to decide just when to 'pull the plug'
for other persons, especially people we have loved and cared about.
One very significant help in making this determination
would be a written statement from the person whose life it was,
laying out some tests or criteria for making life-ending decisions.
So this is the place in your Advance Directive
where you should explain as clearly as you can
how your proxies should proceed in these difficult situations.

     You should be careful about being merely negative
when you write your Advance Directive.
Sometimes people merely make a long list
of the medical treatments and interventions they do not want.
But they fail to explain clearly when they do want these procedures.
And often their objections to the treatments
seem to be esthetic rather than medical or philosophical.
For example, some people say they do not want any tubes.
Perhaps they remember seeing others attached to complex machines
when they were dying in the hospital intensive care unit.
They do not fully understand what these tubes and machines do;
but they know that they did not like the sight.
The image they retain was one of undignified dependence.
And they hope to avoid such scenes
by refusing to have any tubes used in their own care.

     But if we think more deeply, we might welcome tubes
as a temporary means to return us to meaningful life.
Most of us would gladly accept a week in the hospital
recovering from a surgery that saves us from death
and enables us to return to a rich and meaningful life.
And almost all surgeries include having tubes
inserted in various parts of our bodies serving various purposes.

     So you probably should not focus on the medical means
that might be used but focus on the goals and the outcomes.
Unless you are a doctor yourself,
it is probably not meaningful to second-guess
the means employed by your doctors in your treatment.
But it is wise for you to establish your own goals for medical care.

94      YOUR LAST YEAR: CREATING YOUR ADVANCE DIRECTIVE FOR MEDICAL CARE



     A conservative Answer to this Question
would say that the primary goal of all medical treatments
should be the sheer preservation of life.
You might want all treatments that have any hope
of keeping the biological functions of your body going,
even if the length of that 'survival' is short.

     A middle-of-the-road Answer would focus on meaningful survival
as the fundamental purpose of your medical care.
You might want all medical treatments that can restore you
to a level of functioning that you find meaningful.
What limitations would be too burdensome for you?
Might you later change your mind about living a diminished existence
if the only alternative is certain death?

     A more radical position might say that medical treatments
should restore full personhood, as defined in your previous Answer.
The quality of life you want to result from medical treatment
includes: consciousness, memory, language, & autonomy.
The hardest of these to achieve will be autonomy
—being able to set your own goals in life and to carry them forward.
What limitations on your autonomy would you accept
and still find that you have a sufficient quality of life to continue living?
You might in this answer cite some other persons you have known
(or former persons) whose 'lives' were preserved
even tho they had a very low level of autonomy.
If life as a former person would not be acceptable to you,
you should say so in your Advance Directive,
since that level of function might be so low
that you would not be able at the time
to make meaningful decisions or to express your wishes.



    The selection above is the beginning of Question 5 from the book:
Your Last Year: Creating Your Own Advance Directive for Medical Care.
If you click this title, you will see the complete table of contents.
If you would like to see one person's Answer to this Question,
go to James Park's Advance Directive for Medical Care.
Scroll down to Answer 5.




Go to the index page for Your Last Year:
Creating Your Own Advance Directive for Medical Care.



Go to the Portal for Advance Directives.



Go to the Right-to-Die Portal.



Go to the Medical Ethics index page.



Go to the DEATH index page.


Go to the beginning of this website
James Leonard Park—Free Library