Medical murder: Hospital set to ‘pull plug’ on patient who desperately wants to live

Patient Chris Dunn nods “yes” and puts his hands together as if pleading with attorneys when asked, “Do you want to stay alive?”

Patient Chris Dunn nods “yes” and puts his hands together as if pleading with attorneys when asked, “Do you want to stay alive?”

Texas law lets medical pros ‘make life-ending decisions against the family’s wishes’.

A Texas mother and pro-life activists are fighting a Houston hospital in court after the facility cited a state law in its decision to refuse treatment for a 46-year-old man, despite the patient’s wishes and those of his family.

Houston Methodist Hospital is standing behind the decision of an administrative panel that ruled it was best to remove life-sustaining care for Chris Dunn, a former sheriff’s deputy who also worked for the Department of Homeland Security. He did not have insurance at the time of his health crisis. The hospital’s decision is final, according to the Texas Advanced Directive Act, which has been on the books since 1999.

Chris Dunn

Chris Dunn

Dunn suffers from an apparent non-cancerous mass on his pancreas that impacts the connection of his small intestine to the pancreas. His liver and kidneys are also negatively impacted, increasingly so after eight weeks of this fight between the hospital and Dunn’s mother, Evelyn.

The decision by Houston Methodist triggered a 10-day notice before life-sustaining care was to be removed. The removal has been delayed twice by the courts while the constitutionality of the Texas Advanced Directive Act is challenged.

Nonetheless, the pro-life community is appalled by the hospital’s actions and is acting by calling attention to Dunn’s case and petitioning the hospital to change course.

“At this hospital and hospitals around the state, we see that they have a different philosophy. They’re using this law to cover up that anti-life ethic and actually to make these decisions against the wishes of the patient,” said Texas Right to Life Legislative Director John Seago.

But in addition to denying treatment, Seago said the hospital is also refusing Dunn to get treatment anywhere else.

“The law only gives you 10 days, so if an ethics committee decides they want to take away the treatment, they only give the family 10 days to transfer to another facility,” he explained. “That is extremely difficult because the hospital decided they don’t want to treat the patient anymore. However, you can’t transfer without their help.”

Seago said the hospital’s attitude toward Dunn was exactly the same since he first arrived.

“Chris showed up in the hospital and instead of figuring out what was wrong with him, instead of doing the biopsies and the tests, it looked like he was in pretty bad condition and the hospital began to have conversations with the family that indicated the hospital was ready to give up, that the hospital did not think it was worth fighting,” said Seago, noting that doctors consulted through Texas Right to Life say Dunn’s case is not hopeless.

“There is a long list of things that physicians who are dedicated to keeping Chris alive and healing him could do, a lot of the biopsies that need to be done but even some treatments that some of the medical experts that we went to recommended if he was in a facility that was actually dedicated to keeping him alive,” Seago said.

http://www.wnd.com/2015/12/hospital-set-to-pull-plug-on-patient-who-wants-to-live/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *