Saturday, April 4, 2020
Right To Die Essays - Medical Ethics, Euthanasia, Right To Die
  Right To Die    In John A. Robertson's essay, "Cruzan: No Rights Violated," he argues  that the decision made by the Missouri Supreme Court to deny Nancy Beth Cruzan's  parents' request to have their daughter's artificial nutrition and hydration  tube removed was not a violation of Nancy Beth Cruzan's right to refuse  treatment because she had not personally refused treatment. Robertson also  claims that keeping Cruzan alive with this particular medical treatment does not  alienate her constitutional rights, or her parents'. Robertson states that,  " A permanently vegetative patient does not have interests that can be  harmed," simply because he/she cannot feel pain and doesn't know his/her  present condition. Robertson then goes on to say that simply assuming that one  would decline treatment in that situation because of his/her prior beliefs is  not enough evidence to maintain that the directive was, in fact, released by the  said person, and to relieve their self from a state law that orders such a  treatment, the person must have released a directive against that particular  treatment. If one were to argue that an incompetent patient has the right to  have their medical treatment decided by another person on the presumption that  it follows with the patient's previous beliefs, Robertson would declare that the  patient is much different than they were before and does not reserve a  constitutional right to be managed in the same way they would have been. In  placing the right to decide Nancy's treatment in her parents' hands, her parents  would be acting in their own interests according to Robertson, and in choosing  to stop medical treatment of their daughter, they would be denying their child  medical care deemed necessary by the state, which is illegal. With this in mind,    Robertson says that the Supreme Court should not extend a family's privacy to  include the refusal of necessary treatment when the [above] treatment is not  causing harm to the child. Next Robertson says that if a person wants to refuse  treatment while incompetent, it is their obligation to make a directive before  becoming incompetent in order to refuse treatment on the principle of that  particular directive, and that requiring this is "not an undue burden on  persons who wish to issue directives against medical care when  incompetent." If "clear evidence" does not exist in a past  directive, Robertson says that providing the treatment does not alienate a  person's right to regulate his/her own care because of the lack of evidence.    Robertson says that people who criticize the rulings of the Cruzan case tend to  find the Missouri Supreme Court's decision to not allow Nancy's parents to have  their daughter's nutrition and hydration line removed unconstitutional because  they overlook the distinctions that he makes in this essay. By looking at these  distinctions, Robertson believes that people will see that treating Nancy Cruzan  despite her parents' dissent does not violate anyone's constitutional rights.    Lastly, Robertson states "Missouri, like most other states, should permit  the family to stop Nancy's treatment and end their own ordeal. But Missouri  violates no constitutional rights in choosing otherwise." The part about    Robertson's argument that I disagree with the most is when he says that keeping    Nancy connected to the feeding tube does not violate her parents' constitutional  rights. According to the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United    States, "one has the freedom to petition the government for a redress of  grievances" and the Fourteenth Amendment states that, " The stated  cannot deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of  law, nor deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the  laws." With these in mind, it is clear that leaving Nancy connected to the  tube is violating her parents' rights. Her parents are going through plenty of  grievances watching their daughter lay there and waste away to nothing because  she did not specifically say in writing that she did not want to be attached to  a feeding and hydrating line if she ever becomes brain dead. That is inflicting  pain and sorrow on her parents and is violating their pursuit of happiness.    According to the First Amendment, the Cruzan family has the right to petition  the government to have those grievances removed. Robertson says that this is not  right because the family will be doing it in their own interests because the  feeding tube is not harming Nancy in any way. I don't believe that because a  mother has a right to tell their child to not climb a high tree because they  could get hurt. It is not necessarily hurting them,    
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