Criminal Act or Palliative Care? Prosecutions Involving the Care of the Dying

Author:

Alpers Ann

Abstract

Two significant, apparently unrelated, trends have emerged in American society and medicine. First, American medicine is reexamining its approach to dying. The Institute of Medicine, the American Medical Association and private funding organizations have recognized that too many dying people suffer from pain and other distress that clinicians can prevent or relieve. Second, this past decade has marked a sharp increase in the number of physicians prosecuted for criminal negligence based on arguably negligent patient care. The case often cited as a watershed isPeople u. Einaugfer,which involved a New York nursing home patient whose physician was convicted in 1993 of two criminal misdemeanors after he ordered an elderly dialysis patient to be tube fed through a peritoneal dialysis Catheter.How is the growing awareness of dying patients’ pain and the increasing willingness of prosecutors to charge physicians with crimes connected? Pain at the end of life is frequently treated with narcotics, prescription drugs that are closely regulated by state and federal law. That complex web of laws—and a growing fear of legal sanctions—has deterred physicians from prescribing controlled substances. As those legal sanctions move from disciplinary actions to criminal charges, physicians’ fears may expand.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Health Policy,General Medicine,Issues, ethics and legal aspects

Reference204 articles.

1. 115. Kansas uses a typical brain death or cardiopulmonary death standard for determining death. See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 77–205 (1977) (“An individual who has sustained … irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem, is dead”). In Kansas, the determination of death is a medical diagnosis that must be made by a physician, but that physician need not have personally examined the patient. Brain death (irreversible cessation of entire brain function) is a more sophisticated diagnosis than, for example, obvious decapitation, and may require the physician making the diagnosis to base it on personally acquired knowledge. All determinations are governed by the appropriate medical standard. See Kan. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 90–81 (1990), available in 1990 Kan AG LEXIS 82.

2. 68. Id.

3. 109. See id.

4. 96. See Stone, B. , “A Deadly Kind of Care,” Newsweek, Jan. 12, 1998, at 33.

5. 146. See Brief for Appellee at 3, State v. Naramore, No. 96–77069-A (D. Cheyenne County, Jan. 1996) (No. 94-CR-8).

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