Gone ballistic scenarios. Activist by default. audreyjlaferriere@gmail.com phone: 604-321-2276,do not leave voice mail http://voiceofgoneballistic.blogspot.com 207-5524 Cambie Street, Vancouver, B.C. V5Z 3A2 Everything posted I believe to be true. If not, please let me know.
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Sunday, September 11, 2016
Ro Ang
I keep thinking of how cruel she was towards me after Randy died. She would not even give me one of Randy's articles so I could bury it with him. She also prevented me from attending his memorial service. But then maybe it was VGH's lawyers who told her to do this. Like watching Triumph's lawyer tell the world on international tv that he would not allow Trumph to show his tax returns. A man who is running to be President of the USA being told by a lawyer what to do... I think not.
Saturday, September 10, 2016
Competent or Not Competent
It seems to me that competency can vary depending on the outcome a physician wants. One of the questions an assessor for competency will ask is if a patient knows how much money he has in his bank account. How many of use know that. One would have to attend at a bank to be sure. And is that a base to determine whether or not one is competent to make a complex medical decision.
Think about it. Bill C-14 says a person has to be competent to kill himself and physicians say that they have to rush the killing as the person may become incompetent. How many people are going to be labelled competent when they are not.
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Think about it. Bill C-14 says a person has to be competent to kill himself and physicians say that they have to rush the killing as the person may become incompetent. How many people are going to be labelled competent when they are not.
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What is going to happen with euthanasia? Will those that are incompetent be deemed competent for a short period of time and then be rushed to be killed before they become incompetent again.
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Tort of Outrage
I was reviewing what happened to Randy and me and I was shocked at what happened. No reasonable man would believe it, but it did happen. There are only defamatory acts against me.
Currently, I am asking the various agencies for explanations, so far none haver been forthcoming.
It is easy for VCH to do this as who has the money to go up against them. They can do what they want because no one is going to stop them. I had a representation agreement for health care for Randy and VGH ignored it. VCH said that Randy was not dying when he was. VCH said Randy was incompetent when he was competent and competent when he was incompetent. VCH said I was a borderline psychotic which I am not. But VGH did cause me psychological trauma for years. Even now when I allow myself to think of the history of what happened, I wake in the middle of the night soaking wet. The cause is stress.
VCH said that it would make sure that I would not see Randy even on his deathbed which is what nearly happened. I was restricted from seeing him for two months before he died and when I did see him he was unresponsive. So in reality, he was dead. I remember crying in the ICU over his dying body saying that I am sorry that I did not do enough to save him. And Ro Ang, the manager of George Pearson Centre, would not let me get a piece of his clothing so I could bury it with him in his coffin.
I want to know what terrible thing I did to cause this. I do not want to speculate. I want it in writing.
VCH never documented much of anything so whatever happened, did not happen. Ask a lawyer.
Currently, I am asking the various agencies for explanations, so far none haver been forthcoming.
It is easy for VCH to do this as who has the money to go up against them. They can do what they want because no one is going to stop them. I had a representation agreement for health care for Randy and VGH ignored it. VCH said that Randy was not dying when he was. VCH said Randy was incompetent when he was competent and competent when he was incompetent. VCH said I was a borderline psychotic which I am not. But VGH did cause me psychological trauma for years. Even now when I allow myself to think of the history of what happened, I wake in the middle of the night soaking wet. The cause is stress.
VCH said that it would make sure that I would not see Randy even on his deathbed which is what nearly happened. I was restricted from seeing him for two months before he died and when I did see him he was unresponsive. So in reality, he was dead. I remember crying in the ICU over his dying body saying that I am sorry that I did not do enough to save him. And Ro Ang, the manager of George Pearson Centre, would not let me get a piece of his clothing so I could bury it with him in his coffin.
I want to know what terrible thing I did to cause this. I do not want to speculate. I want it in writing.
VCH never documented much of anything so whatever happened, did not happen. Ask a lawyer.
Monday, September 5, 2016
Pay for health chiefs in the USA
September 4 2016
Executive pay for health care CEOs. Obscene: I wonder what the total of the executive suite gets paid for each company.
Executive pay for health care CEOs. Obscene: I wonder what the total of the executive suite gets paid for each company.
Here are the top 20 earners in the health care field, from the AP and Equilar, which analyzed CEO pay at hundreds of companies on the S&P 500:
- Leonard S. Schleifer, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, $47,462,526
- Jeffrey M. Leiden, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, $28,099,826
- Larry J. Merlo, CVS Health, $22,855,374
- Robert J. Hugin, Celgene, $22,472,912
- Alex Gorsky, Johnson & Johnson, $21,128,866
- Michael F. Neidorff, Centene, $20,755,103
- Alan B. Miller, Universal Health Services, $20,427,309
- Kenneth C. Frazier, Merck & Co., $19,898,438
- Miles D. White, Abbott Laboratories, $19,410,704
- John C. Martin, Gilead Sciences, $18,755,952
- Richard A. Gonzalez, AbbVie, $18,534,310
- Heather Bresch, Mylan, $18,162,852
- David M. Cordani, Cigna, $17,307,672
- Mark T. Bertolini, Aetna, $17,260,806
- George A. Scangos, Biogen, $16,874,386
- Robert L. Parkinson, Baxter International, $16,648,750
- John C. Lechleiter, Eli Lilly & Co, $16,562,500
- Marc N. Casper, Thermo Fisher Scientific, $16,307,079
- Robert A. Bradway, Amgen, $16,097,714
- George Paz, Express Scripts Holding, $14,835,587
Total CEO compensation includes salary, bonus, stock and stock option awards, and other perks.
Sunday, September 4, 2016
Why did we need Bill C-14
June 28, 1997
THE SUPREME COURT: THE LIKELY CONSEQUENCES
The New York Times
'Passive Euthanasia' in Hospitals Is the Norm, Doctors Say
By GINA KOLATA
When the Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that states may continue to ban doctor-assisted suicide, it addressed the kind of death in which doctors actively help patients kill themselves. What was not considered in that decision is the fact that nowadays many, if not most, Americans die because someone -- doctors, family members or they themselves -- has decided that it is time for them to go.
What might be called managed deaths, as distinct from suicides, are now the norm in the United States, doctors say. The American Hospital Association says that about 70 percent of the deaths in hospitals happen after a decision has been made to withhold treatment. Other patients die when the medication they are taking to ease their pain depresses, then stops, their breathing.
There is less information on the deaths that occur in nursing homes and in private homes. But doctors say they often discharge patients from a hospital with the implicit understanding that they are sending them home to die, with a morphine drip for pain or without the ministrations of what they would call overzealous doctors at a hospital who might start antibiotics to quell a fever or drugs to stabilize a fluttering heart.
''It's called passive euthanasia,'' said Dr. Norman Fost, director of the Program in Medical Ethics at the University of Wisconsin. ''You can ask who's involved and is it really consensual, but there is no question that these are planned deaths. We know who is dying. Patients aren't just found dead in their beds.''
Doctors, Dr. Fost said, decide not to provide antibiotics to treat an infection, or they withdraw drugs that maintain a patient's blood pressure, or they remove a patient from a ventilator.
Dr. Maurie Markman, a gynecological cancer specialist at the Cleveland Clinic, said a typical case might involve a woman with ovarian cancer who at first responded to chemotherapy but whose cancer now seemed impervious to the powerful drugs, and had developed bowel obstructions.
He could operate to try to remove the obstructions, but the chances are that it would do no good. Or, Dr. Markman said, ''you can put a tube in to drain her stomach so she doesn't throw up.'' But then, he added, ''you have to ask the woman, 'Is that what you really want?' '' She would have to live with that tube for the rest of her life.
Dr. Markman, who said he sees such patients ''at least once a week,'' tells the woman that he wants to focus on her symptoms rather than on her underlying disease. He sends her home with pain medications if she is in pain and anti-nausea drugs if she is nauseated, but the woman will never eat or drink again because of her obstructions. She will not return to the hospital for any sort of aggressive treatment.
Dr. Markman said he never bluntly tells the woman that there is no hope and she is going to die, but he, and probably she, know what is going to happen -- and soon.
Is that assisted suicide or assisted death, or is it relief of suffering? For Dr. Markman, the answer is clear. ''My intent always is to relieve suffering. If that's my goal, I can look myself in the eye. I can go to sleep at night.''
Dr. Joanne Lynn, director of the Center to Improve Care of the Dying at George Washington University School of Medicine, said her typical case might be an old man, fragile and with multiple medical problems. She will finally discharge him from the hospital and send him home to his family, knowing that the decision to send him home is a decision to let death come soon. If he develops a fever, there is no reason even to take his temperature, she said. ''The agreement is that he will not come back into the hospital for almost anything.''
Dr. Lynn added: ''Many of the decisions may be ambiguously articulated. They may be as much as a nod, something brought up in conversation, 'How do you feel about staying here?' ''
But underneath the nods and significant glances, she said, is a conclusion that it is time for the patient to die.
Yet, Dr. Margaret P. Battin, an ethicist at the University of Utah, asks, how much do the patients and family members really understand? She said patients and family members might not grasp the hidden message in their doctor's words. ''When a patient is asked, 'Do you want to go home and be with your family?' it would be easy to misinterpret that,'' Dr. Battin said.
Or, she said, if a doctor says, ''I can see you're in pain, let's start a morphine drip,' '' a patient may not realize that the pain medication will shorten his life. ''I can imagine a great many patients who would say, 'I don't want this pain, but if the medication is shortening my life, I can live with the pain,' '' she said.
''That lack of candor about how the patient's death will occur and under what conditions is the thing that's particularly troubling,'' Dr. Battin added. ''The patient is being invited to make a choice without understanding what the stakes are.''
It is even worse, she said, when family members make these choices for patients. Dr. Battin said she spoke about the issue to an ethicist when she visited the Netherlands, where doctors who help patients kill themselves are typically not prosecuted.
''You Americans talk so much about the slippery slope,'' she recalled the ethicist saying, ''But we perceive you as being much farther along the slippery slope than we are.'' Dr. Battin said she agreed.
But that analysis is glib, some doctors say, and they tell heart-wrenching stories to support their view.
Dr. Beth Y. Karlin, director of the Gilda Radner Ovarian Cancer Program at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said she had a 40-year-old patient with ovarian cancer. The cancer had spread to her liver and she was jaundiced and in such agonizing pain that she could not sit up. ''She did not want to die,'' Dr. Karlin said, but death was near and living as she was was agony.
Dr. Karlin sent her home with a morphine drip, which soothed her pain, sedated her -- and hastened her death. The woman's death was peaceful.
But Dr. Karlin said she had never specifically asked the woman whether she wanted to die more quickly, and tranquilly, with morphine. ''It is the ultimate caring to allow patients to have some dignity,'' she said.
Dr. Karlin and other doctors recoil from the idea of bluntly telling patients they are going home to die.
''You take away hope when you say that nothing can be done,'' Dr. Markman said, adding that he does not even tell a patient that he wants to relieve suffering.
''Suffering has a horrible connotation,'' he said. ''I say, 'Let's focus on another aspect of your cancer -- symptom management.' ''
Dr. Daniel Brock, director of the Center for Bioethics at Brown University School of Medicine, said Americans debating death and dying have assumed that the decision to allow doctor-assisted suicide is ''the big leap where bad things are likely to happen.''
''That seems to me clearly wrong,'' Dr. Brock said, adding that his concern is with the covert managing of death. At least with doctor-assisted suicide, he said, the patients ask to die and take the lethal medicine themselves. But many doctors oppose the notion of routinely prescribing lethal drugs for dying patients, and deny that by managing death they are breaching moral boundaries.
Dr. Fost said: ''Every civilization throughout history has had strict rules against killing, but almost none have prohibitions against letting people die. Many people feel that there is a kind of brutalization when doctors kill people, a dulling of sensibilities, a feeling of dirty hands.''
Dr. Lynn said: ''It's one of these things where the spin is the message. If the question is, 'Is there some decision made that affects the time and manner of dying?' the answer is, 'Yes, and of course there should be.' ''
But that is not the same as actively killing, she said, adding: ''When a patient is ready to die, I can stop nutrition and hydration. I can stop insulin and ventilation. I can sedate them. I can creatively collaborate with the forces of nature. But if they really want the control of being dead tomorrow morning at 10, I cannot promise that.''
Dr. Lynn said that some people ''find it startling or worrisome or a little bit scandalous to think that maybe some exercise some discretion over how they die.'' Others, she added, would say, ''But of course.''
That is not to dismiss the anguishing questions about how far doctors should go in managing death, Dr. Lynn said. ''Almost all who have multiple grounds from which they find their morals find this a terribly troubling issue,'' she added. ''If you don't find it troubling, you aren't thinking hard enough.''
Saturday, September 3, 2016
Bill C-14 deaths since June 17 2016 in BC and Alberta
CBC reported today 3 September 2016 that since 17 June 2016 BC reported 46 cases of medically assisted deaths (Hemlock AID), 49 in Ontario, Alberta had 15, and Manitoba had 8. The other provinces did not report because of privacy issues.
CBC does not say if the deaths were by lethal injection or by pills in their homes circled by their family. The stats should say where the patients died and who was in attendance. I really want to believe in Norman Rockwell.
I also want the process from day 1 to day death videotaped. If they can do this in Switzerland, it can be done here.
I want to know if there was ambivalence by the patient over her decision. I can just see a doctor saying yes she said she changed her mind or was ambivalent but she really did not mean it so she is now dead. This is what Judge Smith wanted in her historic judgment that the patient not be ambivalent. Trusting a doctor to stop the process is not going to happen as the patient is going to die anyways. Why do we need euthanasia when the patient is within days of death anyways. And all this secrecy bothers me, if you want the $state to kill you, then the process should not be private.
CBC does not say if the deaths were by lethal injection or by pills in their homes circled by their family. The stats should say where the patients died and who was in attendance. I really want to believe in Norman Rockwell.
I also want the process from day 1 to day death videotaped. If they can do this in Switzerland, it can be done here.
I want to know if there was ambivalence by the patient over her decision. I can just see a doctor saying yes she said she changed her mind or was ambivalent but she really did not mean it so she is now dead. This is what Judge Smith wanted in her historic judgment that the patient not be ambivalent. Trusting a doctor to stop the process is not going to happen as the patient is going to die anyways. Why do we need euthanasia when the patient is within days of death anyways. And all this secrecy bothers me, if you want the $state to kill you, then the process should not be private.
Belglium kills patients
All health professionals who hasten death should also be sent to jail i.e. ignoring/rationing care. Saying that a patient is going to die anyways is not a defense.
‘Not an angel, but devil of death’: Danish nurse given life term for murdering elderly patients
http://on.rt.com/7grf

© Karoly Arvai / Reuters
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A Danish nurse whom prosecutors described as a ‘devil of death’ has been found guilty of murdering three patients and trying to kill a fourth by deliberately giving them fatal drug overdoses.
On Friday, a Danish court sentenced Christina Hansen, 33, to life imprisonment, saying the woman “knew the patients would die [as a result of] her acts.”
Hansen was charged with administering overdoses of morphine and strong sedatives to three elderly people at a hospital in the southern town of Nykobing Falster in Denmark between 2012 and 2015.
Similar substances were also found in the body of the fourth patient whose life was saved at the last minute.
The Nykobing Falster district court said the patients received “morphine in lethal doses, and that the perpetrator was the nurse,”AFP reported.
“The accused was not an angel of death. She was a devil of death,” prosecutor Michael Boolsen said.
The woman, however, denied all charges and her lawyer appealed the decision. Lawyer Jorgen Lange called the ruling “shocking” as some of the patients had terminal conditions. According to Danish media, two of them had indicated they wanted to die when admitted to the hospital.
“I am quite sure that if Arne Herskov (one of the patients who died in 2012) had been asked if wanted to leave this world, he would have said yes,” said Lange as quoted by the Copenhagen Post.
READ MORE: Canada passes assisted suicide bill, critics say it will 'trap patients in intolerable suffering'
The prosecutor argued saying “there are no mitigating circumstances in this case.”
“We expect professionally competent care in a hospital,” he said. “This was unprofessional, incompetent and inappropriate – I decline to even call it care. Even if the patients were already dying, no one should have the right to kill them,” Boolsen said as cited by the Copenhagen Post.
Seventy witnesses were present at the hearing with several saying that Hansen had been performing harmful acts on patients for some time. They believe the nurse was looking for drama and attention.
A psychological evaluation showed the nurse was suffering from a personality disorder that involved a “persistent quest for excitement,” AFP reported. It also found Hansen was not mentally ill.
During the trial, the prosecutor agreed the case “is all about drama and self-promotion,” Danish media reported.
There had been no “direct evidence” against the suspect until police reportedly found a syringe containing an unusual mixture of two substances. The trial is said to have lasted 25 days.
“I am sincerely tired of hearing the claim that there is no evidence in this case. It is totally wrong…” Bolsoon said in the courtroom, according to Danish media.
Besides life in prison, Hansen has also been ordered to pay compensation of 425,000 kroner (€57, 000) to the family members of one victim and 25,000 kroner (€3,360) to the 74-year-old woman who survived the overdose.
Hansen was charged with administering overdoses of morphine and strong sedatives to three elderly people at a hospital in the southern town of Nykobing Falster in Denmark between 2012 and 2015.
Similar substances were also found in the body of the fourth patient whose life was saved at the last minute.
The Nykobing Falster district court said the patients received “morphine in lethal doses, and that the perpetrator was the nurse,”AFP reported.
“The accused was not an angel of death. She was a devil of death,” prosecutor Michael Boolsen said.
The woman, however, denied all charges and her lawyer appealed the decision. Lawyer Jorgen Lange called the ruling “shocking” as some of the patients had terminal conditions. According to Danish media, two of them had indicated they wanted to die when admitted to the hospital.
“I am quite sure that if Arne Herskov (one of the patients who died in 2012) had been asked if wanted to leave this world, he would have said yes,” said Lange as quoted by the Copenhagen Post.
READ MORE: Canada passes assisted suicide bill, critics say it will 'trap patients in intolerable suffering'
The prosecutor argued saying “there are no mitigating circumstances in this case.”
“We expect professionally competent care in a hospital,” he said. “This was unprofessional, incompetent and inappropriate – I decline to even call it care. Even if the patients were already dying, no one should have the right to kill them,” Boolsen said as cited by the Copenhagen Post.
Seventy witnesses were present at the hearing with several saying that Hansen had been performing harmful acts on patients for some time. They believe the nurse was looking for drama and attention.
A psychological evaluation showed the nurse was suffering from a personality disorder that involved a “persistent quest for excitement,” AFP reported. It also found Hansen was not mentally ill.
During the trial, the prosecutor agreed the case “is all about drama and self-promotion,” Danish media reported.
There had been no “direct evidence” against the suspect until police reportedly found a syringe containing an unusual mixture of two substances. The trial is said to have lasted 25 days.
“I am sincerely tired of hearing the claim that there is no evidence in this case. It is totally wrong…” Bolsoon said in the courtroom, according to Danish media.
Besides life in prison, Hansen has also been ordered to pay compensation of 425,000 kroner (€57, 000) to the family members of one victim and 25,000 kroner (€3,360) to the 74-year-old woman who survived the overdose.
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