NCD Comment John Kelly, December 5, 2013, Topeka Kansas
“New Disability and the Rush to Judgment”
Last month, Indiana hunter Tim Bowers fell from a tree and broke his
neck. Bowers breathed on his own until help arrived, 5 or 6 hours
later. At the hospital, he was intubated, placed on a ventilator, and
put under sedation to spare him physical discomfort.
Less than 24 hours later,
news reports
had doctors predicting that Bowers would “likely spend the rest of his
life in a hospital bed, attached to a respirator unable to hold his
soon-to-be-born child. “
Bowers’ wife Abbey said “The last thing he wanted was to be in a
wheelchair. To have all that stuff taken away would probably be
devastating. He would never be able to give hugs, to hold his baby. We
made sure he knew that, so he could make a decision. Even if he decided
the other thing, the quality of life would’ve been very poor. His life
expectancy would be very low.”
“We made sure he knew that so he could make a decision,” his wife
said. But what Tim Bowers was led to accept as truth about his future
was
false. His tragically unnecessary death is another in a line of
“rush to judgment” cases, in which newly disabled people are immediately
steered towards death.
I have almost exactly the same injury as Bowers and I know that
reliable prognosis requires the passage of time. Weeks or months under
ventilation was typical at my rehabilitation hospital. In the spinal
cord injured community, we know people who weaned off ventilation. We
also know many people who have led thriving lives with breathing
assistance, whether by ventilator, oxygen, or continuous pressure CPAP/
BiPAP.
Tim Bowers deserved to get the same suicide prevention services
offered to any other person in the throes of trauma. Instead, he was
given an incomplete and hasty prognosis and false certainty of future
suffering. No one told him about all the opportunities open to him, or
about the adjustment and adaptation that follow in time.
Based on this misinformation from doctors, and his and his loved
one’s fears about life in a wheelchair, Tim Bowers gave his consent to
dying on the first day after his injury. In no way was his decision
based on informed consent.
Meaningful self-determination gets bypassed
and obstructed in favor of a rush to judgment that cuts short the lives
of newly disabled people based on ignorant and outmoded judgments about
quality of life.
John B. Kelly
New England Regional Director