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Withdrawing or withholding medical treatment is more often an issue of good clinical judgement than an ethical
dilemma. Where the ethics of a situation are complicated, an understanding of basic ethical principles is more
useful than rigid guidelines.
When people are ill they tend to go to a doctor, nurse or another health-care professional to ask for some form
of treatment. The problem may be a sore throat, in which case the person may be hoping for a prescription for antibiotics.
The issue may be more serious and the person wants to be referred to a hospital specialist. It might be that the
person is so ill that he is admitted directly to a hospital, possibly by ambulance.
Healthcare professionals are faced with the task of diagnosing the cause of the person's illness, and then working
out what would be the best approach for treatment. This is a complex process and can easily be misunderstood by
the patient.
In some cases, treatment may have to start before a diagnosis has been made. However, this carries the risk that
the treatment may itself mask the true nature of the disease.
A good doctor should always be considering whether the initial diagnosis was correct and be prepared to change
his or her opinion if doubt starts to arise.
Sometimes patients mistake this change of opinion as the doctor making a mistake. However the art of medicine involves
making decisions on limited amounts of information and expecting to adjust or correct them as new evidence emerges.
In this CMF File we want to consider what the reasons are for initially giving a treatment, for possibly withdrawing
a treatment that has started but is not achieving the intended results, or for with-holding treatment in the first
place.
Clinical decisions
One of the complicating features in this area of discussion is that technology has developed to the point where
it can be used to sustain the physical life of a body seemingly indefinitely. It may even keep the body 'ticking
over' beyond the point when some would say that the person has died. This raises the fear that the person might
be subjected to extreme medical intervention that desperately tries to sustain life, when it would be more appropriate
to let him or her die. On the other hand is the worry that the 'machines' might be turned off too soon.
We also have the ability to treat conditions that if left alone would do little damage to the person. The majority
of men are found to have enlarged or cancerous prostate glands at autopsy. However, these diseased organs did not
cause them to die. In most cases it would have been inappropriate to operate and remove the gland because the procedure
carries risks, would be costly and has a lengthy recovery phase. An operation would be unnecessary over-treatment.
In this case a doctor's task is to try and spot the few people for whom an operation to remove the prostate would
be beneficial.
A doctor also has to be aware that individual patients respond differently to the same treatment. Some drugs have
side effects that are well reported and the doctor should be on the lookout for these 'type A' risks. However,
he or she should also be aware of unusual and unpredictable 'type B' reactions that affect a minority of patients.
The discussion of withdrawing or withholding treatment is often seen as an ethical discussion. However, in all
but the most extreme cases, it is more appropriate to see it as a matter of good clinical judgement.
At the same time a decision to withdraw a treatment is often seen as more ethically complex than not starting the
treatment in the first place. While stopping a treatment may be more traumatic for the patient or relatives, in
fact, decisions for both actions are normally a basic part of good medical practice.
Giving treatment
A medical treatment can have two basic functions. First it can aim to cure the person. This is the sort of treatment
that we hope to receive when we visit our GP. Our desire is to go in, describe the problem, have a few tests and
come away with the treatment that solves it.
To an extent, curing is about warding off death, because if illness is not stopped then a person may die. You could
say that curing helps people to have a good quantity of life.
The second function is to relieve a person's suffering, without curing the underlying problem. This aims to give
the best possible quality of life. In giving pain relief to people with cancer, hospices acknowledge that the person
is dying, but seek to give the best possible care.
People hold different views about whether artificial feeding given to dying patients is 'treatment'. Most doctors
and nurses think it is a basic part of good care, reducing suffering and responding to human need.
When to withhold
Treatments often carry risks, and a doctor needs to weigh up the balance between the potential for doing good
and the potential for harm.
People who are refused anti-biotics when they have a sore throat often feel let down, but the doctor has been weighing
up the small chance of the drugs making any difference, against the very real risk that over-use of antibiotics
can lead to resistant bacteria developing.
Deciding whether to place an artificial hip in a young person with bone disease is complicated. Most hip joints
only last ten years, so if the person is young he or she may need repeated operations. However, at the moment,
the techniques used actually damage the bone, so that it is unlikely a surgeon would be able to perform the procedure
more than twice. Delaying treatment for as long as possible may benefit the patient.
When a road accident victim arrives in a casualty department, staff have to work fast, but they must also assess
whether it is appropriate to commence extreme measures to maintain the patient's life, or whether intervention
is inappropriate.
Sometimes a doctor may wish to withhold treatment because although the patient thinks he or she is ill, the doctor
doesn't agree and believes that any treatment could be harmful. On occasions, friends or family of a patient may
ask for treatment out of misunderstanding or fear.
Respecting people
Christians base treatment decisions on the fundamental principle of respect for the sanctity of human life.
This is not altered if a person is very old or very young, physically able or has severe disabilities.
For example, a recent discussion document from the British Medical Association says that the association 'finds
unacceptable' the practice whereby people with conditions like Down's syndrome are unlikely to be offered life-sustaining
procedures like organ transplants.
Where possible, people also have a right to make decisions about their own treatment. This includes the right to
refuse any treatment even if that decision seems irrational. A person can write an 'advance directive' or 'advance
refusal', which informs doctors and relatives about their likely opinion about treatment. These documents can be
referred to if the person is no longer conscious.
Respecting people also means recognising their mortality. Over-treating patients fails to respect that a part of
being human is to be mortal. It has also led to increasing demands for euthanasia, as people become frightened
that they may be supported by medical technology beyond their ability to cope.
However, if there is any doubt about the best way to proceed, then treatments that prolong life should be continued.
Best interest
One common guide is to look for the patient's 'best interest'. This can help when treating young children, or
adults who are not fully conscious. In the past, best interest was almost always seen as prolonging life. However,
a more complex assess-ment is needed now that medical technology can keep a person's body alive, perhaps inappropriately.
Most people accept that there is no absolute duty to prolong life at all costs. Consequently it is in the best
interests of the patient to stop treatment before it becomes excessively burdensome. The legal ruling in the case
of Tony Bland (the football fan who in 1989 at the age of 17 suffered extreme brain damage at the Hillsborough
Stadium disaster and went into a deep coma called persistent vegetative state - PVS) set a precedent in saying
that prolonging life can be perceived as a harm and potentially as assault.
However it is important to remember that one of the things that makes human beings special is their ability to
form relationships and in particular their ability to form a relationship with God. A test of 'best interest' could
potentially ignore the fact that a severely injured person might not be able to relate to others, but God still
relates to him.
Double effect
Some doctors and lawyers argue that a treatment has a double effect. Pain-killing drugs given to cancer patients
relieve suffering, but on occasions they also accelerate their death. This so-called 'double effect' is seen as
being acceptable as the intention was not to kill the patient, but to reduce his pain.
The phrase 'double effect' is unfortunate in that it suggests that two things were intended, both the reduction
of pain and the death. It is often clearer to talk about the intention of a treatment. In the above case the intention
is to make the person more comfortable. An unintended effect is that death may happen a bit sooner.
This of course does not preclude someone giving a drug and saying that their intention is to stop pain, while causing
death was the real aim. However, looking at patient and drug records can often reveal the real intention or motivation
behind individual treatment decisions.
Another complication with decisions about giving pain relieving drugs to cancer patients is that until the patients
have received the drugs no-one knows whether they will do harm. Some patients find that once the pain is controlled
they show a measure of recovery. In fact, far from shortening the person's life, experts in palliative care say
that when properly used, pain relief shortens the life in only 1 in 1,000 cases.
Laws and guidelines
The legal profession is increasingly being asked to give rulings about medical practice. While it is good that
medical practice should be legally sound, there are dangers in having to get every difficult decision backed by
a court ruling. To start with, in many cases the time taken to get a court decision would be too long and cause
more harm than good.
At the same time, doctors are calling for guidelines. Some of these requests come because they want to know what
best practice is, others are generated by a desire to protect themselves from legal action should things go wrong.
The problem with guidelines is that they are often too inflexible to be in the best interest of the individual
patient. It is often more useful to provide a decision-making framework that draws from accepted ethical boundaries.
Legal judgements made in courts can be even more restrictive. If a judge decides that, on the basis of the presented
evidence, a certain course of treatment needs to be followed, then it is difficult to make any changes if the doctors
decide that the diagnosis was wrong, or the treat-ment is not having the desired effect.
As British Law adapts to conform more with European systems, there will be an increasing tendency for decisions
to be made according to prescribed 'rule books' rather than individual judgements being made about individual cases
and situations.
Duncan Vere is a retired hospital general physician with a special interest in drugs and treatments.
He is Professor (Emeritus) of Therapeutics in the University of London and a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
and the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Medicine.
Copyright ©2002 Christian Medical Fellowship. Comments, suggestions, information: email
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