Food Tube Ethics

A reader writes:

The question most troubling me is whether the Pope’s statement also applies to terminally ill patient’s whose death is certain and imminent.

For example, someone who does not have a feeding tube and who has a terminal illness slips into a coma. My understanding of Church teaching is that use of a feeding tube is not mandated in this case.

The ability to significantly extend life through feeding tubes for a large number of people is something that is relatively new. Prior to the invention of plastic, antibiotics, and effective antiseptics, it would have been very difficult for technology like this to be used to extend the lives of large numbers of people. As a result, there are still aspects of this question that are being thought through by moral theologians. Eventually (within the next 20 years, in all likelihood, and definitely within the next 50 given the aging of the European population) these questions will be much more thoroughly explored and certain of the solutions proposed by moral theologians will be signed off on–or rejected–by the Magisterium.

Even though there are questions left to be definitively answered, the outlines of the correct answers are already becoming clear. Before getting into the substance of the matter, though, I’d like to put out a couple of warnings:

First, there are some ostensible experts in clerical collars making the rounds of the talk shows and editorial pages right now who are saying very dismissive things about recent Vatican interventions on this subject, accusing the Holy See, among other things, of upending centuries of Catholic moral theology.

This is simply not true.

The deliverances of these individuals are grossly defective and not to be trusted. Among other problems with what they have been saying, it simply is not possible to take statements made four or five hundred years ago regarding the moral obligations that pertain to feeding patients and plop them down in a twenty-first century context taking no account of the change in technology. Five hundred years ago it was much harder to deliver nutrition and hydration to an individual in a wide variety of medical situations than it is now. It is now much easier to do so, and that changes things.

Further, there is such a thing as doctrinal development, and hundreds of years ago we were less doctrinally developed in this area than we present are. The last fifty years have seen a dramatic stimulus to doctrinal development in this area due to the development of new medical technologies and the rise of the culture of death. One cannot appeal to things five hundred years ago to trump recent development, though that is a frequent tactic of dissenters on every part of the ecclesiastical spectrum.

The second warning is that not all prestigious or seemingly official statements on matters in this area are to be taken without nuance. Some seemingly official statements (e.g., documents ostensibly issued by national conferences) have been found problematic in light of later Vatican interventions, which have served as correctives to some of the things being said on lower levels.

The warnings being given, let’s look at the core of the matter.

As Evangelium Vitae made reaffirmed, euthanasia properly-so-called is an intrinsically evil act that can never be performed. EV provided the following definition of euthanasia:

Euthanasia in the strict sense is understood to be an action or
omission which of itself and by intention causes death, with the
purpose of eliminating all suffering [EV 65].

For euthanasia to occur, four conditions must thus be fulfilled:

  1. There must be an action or omission of action.
  2. This must cause death "of itself" (i.e., it is a sufficient condition to cause death).
  3. This must "by intention" cause death.
  4. The purpose must be to eliminate suffering.

In the case of failing to administer food and water through a feeding tube (either by not installing one or by removing or discontinuing the use of one), condition (1) is fulfilled as this is an act of omission.

Since food and water are necessary for life, condition (2) is also fulfilled if the person can only or will only eat through a food tube.

The question of whether failing to administer food and water through a feeding tube constitutes euthanasia is thus determined by whether conditions (3) and (4) are fulfilled.

It may be the case that one is fulfilled without the other. For example, if one withholds food and water from a spouse because one wants the spouse to die for reasons unrelated to ending suffering (e.g., because one is afraid of what the spouse might one day tell the police or because one wishes to inherit money or property) then condition (3) is fulfilled but condition (4) is not fulfilled. In these cases what occurs is not euthanasia but simply murder.

Similarly, one could intend condition (4) to be fulfilled without condition (3). This would happen, for example, if the insertion of the food tube would itself cause damage to the patient that would only exacerbate his suffering.

In an earlier post I mentioned what happens to many folks when their bodies stop manufacturing albumin. In those cases, continuing to administer food and water will actually harm the person. With a terminally ill person in that condition, one could omit the food tube in order to minimize pain (getting us at least in the direction of fulfilling condition 4) without thereby intending to cause the person’s death, so condition (3) is not satisfied. In that case there is no euthanasia.

In the case of a terminially ill person who has lost the ability to manufacture albumin (and everyone I’ve heard of who has lost the ability to manufacture albumin is terminally ill) continuing to administer food and water would not only not help the person live longer but could actually hasten the person’s death due to the damage it does to the body, meaning that the act would be morally licit.

This is what the 2004 PVS address is getting at when it states:

I should like particularly to underline how the administration of water
and food, even when provided by artificial means, always represents a natural means of preserving life, not a medical act. Its use, furthermore, should be considered, in principle, ordinary and proportionate,
and as such morally obligatory, insofar as and until it is seen to have
attained its proper finality, which in the present case consists in
providing nourishment to the patient and alleviation of his suffering.

While the administration of food and water is considetered "in principle ordinary and proportionate," this may not apply in particular cases, as with a person unable to process the food and water. In that case it is no longer ordinary and proportionate, in that it fails to attain its proper finality–nourishment and alleviation of the patient’s suffering. In such cases it ceases to be morally obligatory.

To focus this on the situation the reader asks about, let’s look again at the conditions he mentioned:

The question most troubling me is whether the Pope’s
statement also applies to terminally ill patient’s whose death is
certain and imminent.

For example, someone who does not have a feeding tube and who has a
terminal illness slips into a coma. My understanding of Church teaching
is that use of a feeding tube is not mandated in this case.

This situation seems to involve two conditions:

  • The patient’s death is certain to be imminent (all of our deaths are morally certain; the point is that imminent death is certain).
  • The patient has slipped into a coma.

The key factor here is the first. Whether the person has slipped into a coma is not really relevant. If someone has slipped into a coma and will remain in one for twenty years (i.e., death is not imminent) then you can’t starve them. The real issue is the imminence of the person’s death.

It seems to me that the first condition is significant for but not of itself sufficient for making the non-administration of food and water licit. Here’s why:

If a person’s death is extremely imminent (say, an hour from now) then there seems little point in putting in a food tube that will not buy the person any more life. In such a case it would not be morally obligatory.

On the other hand, if the person’s death is not that imminent (say, a month from now) then there would be a point in putting in a food tube since it would buy the person the extra life they would not otherwise have and so would be morally obligatory unless there is some other factor affecting the situation (e.g., the patient’s body no longer manufactures albumin, the food tube needs to be inserted through the stomach and would hurt a great deal or have a significant risk of infection due to a compromised immune system).

The nearness of death thus seems to be an important factor in determining whether it is morally required to administer food and water in these cases, but not the only factor to be taken into consideration:

  • If the administration of food and water would not buy the person any more life then it would not be necessary.
  • If it would buy the person more life but at a cost proportionate to the gain (e.g., the person will be in screaming agony in that additional time) then it may be forgone as it no longer achieves its principal finality, per the 2004 PVS address.
  • If it would buy the person more life and the cost is not proportionate to the gain (e.g., it involves only mild discomfort) then it is obligatory.

Unfortunately, the Church has not yet developed a system for weighing the relative proportions of costs and gains in this area, which to different individuals may seem incommensurate to each other. This part is where the individual’s conscience (the patient’s or the person who speaks for the patient) comes into play at present. Hopefully (and probably) we will have more guidance from the Magisterium on this point in the future.

Hope this helps!

End Of Life Guide

The case of Terri Schiavo has got a lot of folks thinking about what might happen to them should they ever fall victim to an accident or illness that leaves them unable to speak for themselves.

This touches on an issue we get a lot of queries about at Catholic Answers. We periodically get questions from people who are interested in finding out more about what the Church requires in such situations. Some are merely curious. Some are wanting to write living wills or make grants of durable power of attourney. Some are in the middle of an end of life situation with a relative.

We do what we can to help them, and often that includes getting them a copy of

THIS END OF LIFE GUIDE

by the National Catholic Bioethics Center, a group known for their thoughtfulness, fidelity to the Magisterium, and expertise in this area.

Here Comes Peter Cottontail! RUN!!!

A reader writes:

Is there an ‘official’ Church teaching on the Easter Bunny?

Yes: The Easter Bunny is our friend.

I can explain how Santa Claus is St. Nicholas at Christmas to the kids (even though they now figure they should get gifts on St. Nicholas’ Feast Day Dec. 6 AND Christmas).

Yeah, kids’ll do that. I would if I were a kid.

It still seems odd to me on the great day of Easter Sunday, we give our children candy attached to the really bizarre story that a bunny delivered it.

Yeah, well, I’ve never been a fan of these society-wide conspiracies to deceive small children. Seems like a bad idea to me. Y’know, what with the lying and the deceiving an’ all. I think God said something about that once.

I mean, sure it’s fun an’ all to exploit the gullibility of children, the instinct that God built into them to trust what adults and–particularly–their parents tell them so that they’ll grow up and survive in the world. I mean, with that instinct in ’em, they’ll believe whatever nonsense you tell ’em, and you can have a real good chuckle at how they believe the most patently absurd stuff and how "cute" they are when they get all wide-eyed at the prospect of the imminent arrival of a non-existent magical being that you’ve got their expectations up for.

And I know it’s like a big happyfun game for adults to manufacture and plant false evidence that will reinforce their belief in the magical being and reinforce the attachment of their affections to the non-existent bestower-of-gifts.

But it still doesn’t seem to be a good idea to me.

Though don’t quote me on that because the Church doesn’t have an official teaching on this subject. I lied and decieved you when I told you that the Church teaches that the Easter Bunny is our friend. It actually doesn’t teach that. For all the Church says, the Easter Bunny could be the mortal enemy of mankind, ready to ascend from his sunken city of R’lyeh and destroy the human race and inaugurate a reign of murder and madness and mayhem. (Oh, wait. That’s Cthulhu, not the Easter Bunny.)

That being said, if you want a moral, ethical way to allow your children to have some fun with "the Easter Bunny experience," it seems to me that you could simply make it clear to them from the beginning that the Easter Bunny is make-believe and that it’s all just a happyfun game we can play as long as we remember that the real reason for Easter is that Our Lord Jesus Christ rose from the dead on that day.

Which is why–incidentally–the bit with the Easter eggs seems to have gotten started: In some places in prior years they didn’t eat eggs during Lent and so you had all these eggs at Easter that you needed to get rid of before they went bad, as many already had during Lent due to absence of refrigeration.

Oh, and remember to teach your children to bite the heads off chocolate bunnies first.

The Church is very firm on the need to do that.

Chocolate bunnies are the enemies of mankind.

First Comes Confession

From our Restating-The-Obvious Department:  John Paul II reminds priests that those aware that they are in mortal sin cannot go to Communion.

"In keeping with Church teaching, John Paul II issued a reminder that no one who is aware of being in a state of mortal sin can go to Communion.

"The Pope confirmed the traditional teaching of the magisterium in a message published by the Holy See on Saturday. The message was addressed to young priests who attended a course last week on the "internal forum" — questions of conscience — organized by the tribunal of the Apostolic Penitentiary.

[…]

"Only someone who is sincerely conscious of not having committed a mortal sin can receive the Body of Christ," states the papal message, recalling the doctrine of the Council of Trent. "And this continues to be the teaching of the Church also today."

GET THE STORY.

Memo from Cardinal to U.K. Yahoos:

"[R]eligion and politics do mix." –Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor (Archbishop of Westminster)

"Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor ensured that abortion would play a greater part in the coming election than any other by praising the Tory leader’s call for a cut in the legal abortion limit from 24 to 20 weeks.

"The Archbishop of Westminster went on to admit that Labour was no longer the natural party of choice for the UK’s six million Catholics.

"His views could be particularly significant in marginal constituencies with large Catholic populations such as the West Midlands, the North West and parts of London."

I can’t wait to see the country map following England’s election and find out where the red and blue counties in England lie.

GET THE STORY.

Conscience

A reader writes:

I was told by a Catholic that he was free to disagree with Church teaching by virtue of the "Doctine of Conscience" He doesn’t believe that missing mass is a mortal sin, and for a lapsed Catholic to take communion etc.

I am not yet a Catholic, and am being confused by individuals who are active practicing Catholics, but appear to be of the cafeteria type. Am I out to lunch and uncharitable?

Nope.

Here is what the Catechism of the Catholic Church says:

1790 A human being must always obey the certain judgment of his conscience. If he were deliberately to act against it, he would condemn himself. Yet it can happen that moral conscience remains in ignorance and makes erroneous judgments about acts to be performed or already committed.

1791 This ignorance can often be imputed to personal responsibility. This is the case when a man "takes little trouble to find out what is true and good, or when conscience is by degrees almost blinded through the habit of committing sin." In such cases, the person is culpable for the evil he commits.

1792 Ignorance of Christ and his Gospel, bad example given by others, enslavement to one’s passions, assertion of a mistaken notion of autonomy of conscience, rejection of the Church’s authority and her teaching, lack of conversion and of charity: these can be at the source of errors of judgment in moral conduct.

Your friend clearly has an erroneous notion of conscience. Whether he is culpable for this or not is a matter that we should not attempt to judge, but he has an erroneous notion nonetheless.

Your friend apparently knows what the Church holds regarding certain situations (i.e., that it is gravely sinful to miss Mass on Sundays without an excusing cause, that lapsed Catholics should not go to Communion without confession first) and is wilfully disregarding this. It seems from what you have said as if he has taken little trouble to investigate the firmness with which the Church holds these points or that he knows they are firm but wilfully disregards this fact. This means that he may be in a situation where he is culpable for his error on these points, though this cannot be said with certainty.

What is certain is that your friend is wrong and needs to re-think these issues with greater attention to the teaching and governing authority that Christ bestowed upon the Church:

"I give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatsoever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; whatsoever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heave"–Jesus Christ, Matthew 16:18

An Interesting And Disturbing Article

WaPo EDITORIALIST E. J. DIONNE JR. OFFERS THIS DISTURBING BUT INTRIGUING PIECE ON PRO-LIFE STRATEGY.

His thesis seems to be that by ruthlessly backing the strongest Republican candidates, even if they are not pro-life, Republicans have gotten themselves in a position to appoint more anti-Roe judges and justices, while by being inflexible on the subject of abortion, Democrats have weakened their ability to resist such appointments.

The basic idea is thus that the Republicans have been able to construct a "big tent" by keeping the overall direction of the party controlled by pro-lifers while also allowing anti-lifers to participate on the fringes.

Now some Democrats are trying to do the same thing by promoting stronger Democratic candidates even if they are pro-life, with the result again that there are likely to be more votes for anti-Roe judges.

He concludes:

Karl Rove must be grinning about all this. By managing the abortion issue with considerable cunning, Republicans are winning the power to stack the courts with the very sorts of conservative judges the pro-choice movement fears. You have to wonder why it is so hard for so many Democrats to learn that a little open-mindedness on a very difficult question is not only a virtue but also a necessity.

GET THE STORY.

Birth Spacing

A reader writes:

I was wondering if it is wrong to use nfp to space out pregnancies to be 3 years apart. I want to enjoy each child’s babyhood. On one hand having many children close together would not be good for my emotional state. I really admire women who are not fazed by the strain. I seem to not be able to handle much stress. But the biggest reason is wanting to give each child as much of my attention as I can offer so I know each baby. I’m not saying that mothers who have children close together do not know their babies. But they seem to be made of something I am not. Trust me on this! My mother had her kids one after the other and acted like she wished she hadn’t had all of us. She also said she regretted not "knowing" her youngest because she was too "busy," that she didn’t have the time.

When I read my reasons they sound stupid, like I am making lame excuses for myself. I just want the baby to be more independant before I get pregnant again. What do you say? Do I have "Just Reasons" to use NFP?

The Church does not have a list of what counts as acceptable reasons, so I can’t simply go to a Church doc and tell you what it says.

What the documents do is speak in more general terms about the kinds of reasons that can be sufficient, and they allude to physical, psychological, and economic reasons. Obviously, trivial factors falling into these classes would not suffice, but is some significant human good is being protected.

The reasons that you cite are of a psychological nature protecting the human good of yourself (by not being overstressed) and the children (by being able to better mother them due to not being overstressed). These are significant human goods.

Whether they are sufficient is a decision for you and your husband to make based on your own knowledge of yourselves and your family situation. The Church does not propose a cookie-cutter solution to such questions as it recognizes that different people are different and are able to handle different numbers of children at different times in their lives. If your conclusion is that y’all are not able to have children closer together without unduly burdensome strain, the Church respects the choice to use NFP to space them.

One factor that may be of use in making your decision: In prior ages when breastfeeding was universal, usually for the first few years of life, then (given the diets people had) many women would frequently (though not always) end up with kids two to four years apart anyway.

On the other hand, there is something to be said for not having the kids too far apart. If they are sufficiently far apart then (a) it’s like having a series of only children as they have fewer contemporaries to interact with and (b) it prolongs the amount of time that you have to take care of infants.

Three years apart is not enough to create the fullness of effect (a), but it will have effect (b). Regardless of how many children you have (2, 5, 10, 15), if they are spaced three years apart then you will be involved in the care of infants and toddlers for three times as long as if they are spaced one year apart. By contrast, if the kids are bunched up then it means more work initially but less work later on.

I don’t know whether you have children or not yet, but whether or not you do, the best thing to do may not be to try to keep to a strict schedule, which will be hard to implement anyway. (E.g., if you wait 2.25 years after baby #1 before trying to have baby #2 and then it takes a few months to have baby #2 and then baby #2 miscarries then it will be more than three years before baby #3 can be born.) The prudent thing to do is likely to re-evaluate the situation after each baby rather than trying to implement an ideal plan.

20