Human Dignity in the “Vegetative” State



On Christmas Eve, 1999, the family of Patricia White Bull in Albuquerque, New Mexico received an unexpected gift. After 16 years in a supposedly irreversible “vegetative state,” Mrs. White Bull began to speak.

“Don't do that,” she blurted out when nurses were trying to fix her nursing home bed. Then she started speaking her children's names, catching up on family developments, and eating foods she had not been able to swallow for many years. Her mother says her sudden recovery is a Christmas miracle from God (The Washington Times, January 5, 2000, p. A3).

Mrs. White Bull's story is not unique. In recent years, a number of patients have unexpectedly recovered from the “vegetative” state — a dimly understood condition in which patients have sleep/wake cycles, but do not seem aware of themselves or their environment. And according to medical experts speaking at a March 2004 international congress on the “vegetative state” in Rome, medical science is only beginning to realize how little is understood about this condition.

The term “persistent vegetative state” was coined in 1972. Physicians said then that patients with this diagnosis had no consciousness or sensation, and could not recover once they had remained in this state for a certain number of months. The latest findings contradict all this. It turns out that patients diagnosed as being in a “vegetative” state may have significant brain waves, and substantial parts of the upper brain may be alive and functioning. This functioning may even change depending on whether a friend or relative is speaking nearby. The testimony of many families that their loved ones in this state seem to know when they are present can no longer be dismissed as simply wishful thinking. And medical experts are no longer so confident that they can name a number of months or years in this state that makes some degree of recovery impossible.

On March 20, 2004, near the end of the Rome conference on the “vegetative” state, Pope John Paul II delivered an important speech in an audience with the attendees. This speech clarified and reaffirmed our moral obligation to provide normal care to these patients, including the food and fluids they need to survive. Here the Holy Father made several points:

No living human being ever descends to the status of a “vegetable” or an animal. “Even our brothers and sisters who find themselves in the clinical condition of a 'vegetative state' retain their human dignity in all its fullness,” he said. “The loving gaze of God the Father continues to fall upon them, acknowledging them as his sons and daughters, especially in need of help.” Against a “quality of life” ethic that makes discriminatory judgments about the worthiness of different people's lives, the Church insists that “the value of a man's life cannot be made subordinate to any judgment of its quality expressed by other men.”

Because this life has inherent dignity, regardless of its visible “quality,” it calls out to us for the normal care owed to all helpless patients. In principle, food and fluids (even if medically assisted, as in tube feeding) are part of that normal care. Such feeding, he said, is “a natural means of preserving life, not a medical act.” This means, among other things, that the key question here is simply whether food and fluids effectively provide nourishment and preserve life, not whether they can reverse the patient's illness. Even incurable patients have a right to basic care. This judgment does not change when the “vegetative” state is diagnosed as “persistent” or unlikely to change: “The evaluation of probabilities, founded on waning hopes for recovery when the vegetative state is prolonged beyond a year, cannot ethically justify the cessation or interruption of minimal care for the patient, including nutrition and hydration.”

Deliberate withdrawal of food and fluids to produce a premature death can be a form of euthanasia, that is, unjust killing. “Death by starvation or dehydration is, in fact, the only possible outcome as a result of their withdrawal. In this sense it ends up becoming, if done knowingly and willingly, true and proper euthanasia by omission.”

The Church's traditional teaching, that one is not obliged to impose useless or excessively burdensome treatments on patients, remains valid. The obligation to provide assisted feeding lasts only as long as such feeding meets its goals of providing nourishment and alleviating suffering. But to those who might too easily withdraw such feeding as overly burdensome, the Holy Father warns that “it is not possible to rule out a priori that the withdrawal of nutrition and hydration, as reported by authoritative studies, is the source of considerable suffering for the sick person.” If a seemingly unresponsive patient might be able to feel the burdens of tube feeding, he or she may also be able to feel the suffering of being dehydrated to death.



We must not forget the needs of families caring for a loved one in a “vegetative” state. The rest of us must not abandon these families, but reach out to give them every possible assistance so they will not face their burdens alone. Respite care, financial support, the sympathetic cooperation of medical professionals and volunteers, and psychological and spiritual comfort were among the kinds of help the Holy Father urges society to provide.

The pope's speech responds to a serious moral and legal problem that has divided families, ethical advisors, and courts in the United States and elsewhere. For many years, “right-to-die” groups have promoted the withdrawal of assisted feeding from patients in a “vegetative” state. Sometimes they have admitted that they see such patients as better off dead (or at least see their families as better off if the patients are dead). Ethicist Daniel Callahan warned in the Hastings Center Report in October 1983 that many of his colleagues favored such policies not because of special burdens involved in such feeding, but because “a denial of nutrition may in the long run become the only effective way to make certain that a large number of biologically tenacious patients actually die.” In some of the “tube feeding” court cases that have divided families and sparked headlines, even some family members have declared that the patient is essentially already dead — an “empty shell” with no human dignity.

Church officials have warned against this trend in the past. In 1992, for example, the U.S. bishops' Committee for Pro-Life Activities issued a resource paper titled “Nutrition and Hydration: Moral and Pastoral Reflections,” recommending a strong presumption in favor of assisted feeding for patients diagnosed as being in the “persistent vegetative state.” The paper strongly opposed any removal of these means designed to hasten the patient's death from dehydration or starvation. It also found that assisted feeding is generally not “extraordinary means” — rather it is usually an effective way to sustain life that does not impose grave burdens on patients. Similarly, a 1995 “Charter for Health Care Workers” issued by the Pontifical Council for Pastoral Assistance to Health Care Workers stated: “The administration of food and liquids, even artificially, is part of the normal treatment always due to the patient when this is not burdensome for him: their undue suspension could be real and properly so called euthanasia.”

By reaffirming these principles, the Holy Father is reminding us that here, as on issues such as abortion, embryo research and capital punishment, the Church's voice must be raised to insist that every human being is a beloved child of God, that no one is worthless or beyond our loving concern. This does not mean that patients must accept tube feeding in cases where they would see it as an unwarranted intrusion that only increases their suffering. When discussing the burdens and benefits of medical procedures, the Church has always recognized that these judgments have a subjective element, and that patients' own assessments are to be given great weight. In the final analysis, as Pope Pius XII said in a 1952 address to the medical community, “the doctor has no other rights or power over the patient than those which the latter gives him.”

At the same time, the obligation to respect human life in every condition is addressed to all of us, including patients. Catholics should beware of “advance directives” that reject assisted feeding across the board; rather, we should seek out more carefully-worded documents that recognize the presumption in favor of such care when it does not impose undue burdens on the patient. Many state Catholic conferences have produced statements on this issue, or even sample forms allowing Catholics to specify their wishes in ways that reflect Catholic values and conform to any requirements of state law. Forms allowing the patient to name a trusted proxy decision maker, to made decisions when the patient can no longer do so, may be more helpful than a written declaration that tries to anticipate all future medical situations.

Hospitals and physicians, for their part, should not be obliged to comply with a request from patient or family that they believe is immoral. The Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services state that a Catholic hospital “will not honor an advance directive that is contrary to Catholic teaching,” and adds: “If the advance directive conflicts with Catholic teaching, an explanation should be provided as to why the directive cannot be honored” (Directive 24).

When would such a directive conflict with Catholic teaching? When it ignores the general obligation to support and care for human life, and treats a condition like the “vegetative” state, in and of itself, as a basis for withdrawing even the most basic measures for preserving the patient's life and comfort. In an extreme case, it may be obvious that the document is rejecting assisted feeding simply to ensure that the patient in such a condition dies as soon as possible.

Patients and families, like others involved in medical decisions, need to understand that while specific medical procedures may at times become useless or burdensome, this can never be said of human persons themselves. Caring for loved ones who may never be able to respond or thank us for our faithfulness could be the ultimate test of our commitment to a culture of life.

Richard M. Doerflinger is Deputy Director of the Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities, U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Subscribe to CE
(It's free)

Go to Catholic Exchange homepage

MENU