Caroline Struthers
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Exactly.People with gut obstruction of benign origin can I believe be kept well with PEG tubes for long periods
Exactly.People with gut obstruction of benign origin can I believe be kept well with PEG tubes for long periods
Thanks for your replies @Jonathan Edwards and your ongoing work.
Just as a side point on sectioning and capacity for decision making (sorry, taking the thread further off-topic):
Practice varies, I don't think it is a big deal for some doctors. Having spent a lot of the last year sitting with an elderly relative in hospital observing what was going on around us, I have certainly seen doctors whose threshold for deciding that someone lacks capacity and needs to be sedated without their knowledge in order to impose care is surprisingly, and probably unethically, low. If doctors were uniformly acting in the best interests of their patients, were never stressed and tired, and always had plenty of time to explain things and didn't have to ration scarce resources, then the idea of sectioning would be less concerning.
But, regardless of whether a decision to classify a patient as lacking capacity is well-intentioned and appropriate or not, I have seen such a decision that was only in place briefly result in a patient losing trust in the medical system and decide that they will never seek hospital care again. Even if the patient understands that being sectioned is pragmatic, that it is simply a means to a desirable outcome, even then, as others have said, sectioning combined with a lack of a clear physical cause for the lack of capacity is likely to have ongoing negative consequences.
Categorising a patient as lacking in the capacity to make decisions for themselves is by no means rare. New Zealand's Law Foundation has done a lot of work on capacity and the following is from a 2014 report of theirs. I was astonished by the reported estimated prevalence of patients lacking capacity:
Although since 2014 views of capacity have become less binary (capable/not capable) and more situational.
Ha. Although we do know some things that make some decisions better than others.
I do see everyone's point of view but my key thought is that things have gone wrong precisely because in a nearly impossible situation everyone has said 'Oh no, you cannot do that because there is a risk of this'. If you are faced with people in a burning house or someone dying of starvation you have to calculate what has most risk. When leaving the people in the house or sending the starving person home with no help is guaranteed to produce the wrong result someone has to be flexible on their principles.
Examples from slightly different situations don't always apply.
Another way of looking at it might be that you cannot diagnose (in BPS terms) a functional disorder and at the same time claim the person has mental capacity because a functional disorder entails a failure to understand what is going on. Even for those who happily accept that they have seizures due to 'FND' if they go on having seizures then their minds must be getting things wrong to produce the seizures.
So there cannot be this third category that should not be given support. There are only two options, both of which merit support.
I don't think we know that at all.
The doctors appear to have decided that if sectioning was not applicable then they had no responsibility to do more than try an NG tube once or twice. If a patient is deemed sectionable that means that they are deemed not to be able to make decisions about their own safety. In which case survival is entirely the responsibility of the medical staff rather than the patient. So everything has to be tried. In other cases other things have been tried. In at least some of these this has been seen as blundering and inhumane, but that is a different issue. The very fact that mental capacity was based about indicates to me that other things would have been done if it was considered absent.
I don't think we know that at all.
The doctors appear to have decided that if sectioning was not applicable then they had no responsibility to do more than try an NG tube once or twice. If a patient is deemed sectionable that means that they are deemed not to be able to make decisions about their own safety. In which case survival is entirely the responsibility of the medical staff rather than the patient. So everything has to be tried. In other cases other things have been tried. In at least some of these this has been seen as blundering and inhumane, but that is a different issue. The very fact that mental capacity was based about indicates to me that other things would have been done if it was considered absent.
Completely agree about economics. I'd be happy to add history and political studies to that too.Moreover, although human beings have a set up they call 'intelligence' that they think tends to optimise decisions in huge areas of human activity it is garbage. Economics is one. People may think they have mental capacity about economics but I suspect it is all illusory.
I don’t think that it’s appropriate to speculate publicly on the capacity of an individual person to make decisions for themselves.
At its core is a problem of fundamentally dishonest misrepresentation. It was critical with Maeve. Decisions were made about her based on decision-making that was dishonestly kept secret with the knowledge that it can't be justified. PwME are asked to put trust into systems and people who have no capacity to be honest about what they intend to do. Psychosomatic models are fundamentally dishonest in their justifications and intents. They even documented it in full: they lie to gain trust so it can be betrayed more effectively.My understanding of the situation regarding ME is that it is a horrendous (I'm practising not using the "f" word) mess, and most of the treatment options available are unhelpful or harmful. I still have to make the best decisions I can under those circumstances, and would modestly posit the notion that I have the mental capacity to do so
This ties in to what I just wrote about psychosomatic ideology being fundamentally dishonest. It's a slightly different aspect of it but it amplifies the problem of deliberate deceit: the very concepts lack internal consistency.Another way of looking at it might be that you cannot diagnose (in BPS terms) a functional disorder and at the same time claim the person has mental capacity because a functional disorder entails a failure to understand what is going on. Even for those who happily accept that they have seizures due to 'FND' if they go on having seizures then their minds must be getting things wrong to produce the seizures.
So there cannot be this third category that should not be given support. There are only two options, both of which merit support.
Based on what was said at the inquiry we doI don't think we know that at all.
The doctors appear to have decided that if sectioning was not applicable then they had no responsibility to do more than try an NG tube once or twice. If a patient is deemed sectionable that means that they are deemed not to be able to make decisions about their own safety. In which case survival is entirely the responsibility of the medical staff rather than the patient. So everything has to be tried. In other cases other things have been tried. In at least some of these this has been seen as blundering and inhumane, but that is a different issue. The very fact that mental capacity was based about indicates to me that other things would have been done if it was considered absent.
BIB is the nub of it, in my opinionJust the same, Maeve agreed to go to the hospital because she would otherwise have died. But she died anyway because the secret understanding that the staff had of ME/CFS is fundamentally dishonest, based on pseudoscience and bigotry with zero flexibility or adaptation to circumstances. They were far more worried about potential harms to her body if it turns out to have been psychosomatic all along than they were about her slow agonizing death. But no one would have said that beforehand, and none had the integrity to admit to it with hindsight, after their disastrous decisions led to her preventable death.
There is no informed consent in this context. You can agree to something but the other party did not agree to the same thing. Just the same as with their definitions, their weird questions with overlapping interpretations, and so on. They have their own secret interpretation which they will never admit to. This is a root cause of almost all the problems dealing with this illness: psychosomatic ideology is incompatible with honest professional behavior. But no one can admit to this, because they genuinely believe otherwise, or ultimately because they are expected to not only make those decisions but to be dishonest about their intent and purpose. It could turn out OK, but there is no way to know, so there is no informed consent.
It's the same situation as making a contract with a person or organization when you know beforehand that they have no intention of respecting it and that you have no means of enforcing anything. So it's more like geopolitics with a hostile nation that has nuclear missiles they are willing to use than anything resembling health care. It's a "you and what army?" case, where you have no army and they are a giant military force.
Even worse is all the cheap slogans and lies about informed consent and duty of this and that. They all mean nothing in real life, they're all enforced through internal compliance codes with zero oversight and often secret proceedings where the house always wins. There is nowhere to go from there. Either the dishonest party, the medical profession, cleans itself, or everything gets stuck in place. Things have been stuck in place for decades. They just won't budge on it, they don't have to and don't want to.
Forgive me if this has already been said, i'm not able to read/absorb much atm.If a patient is deemed sectionable that means that they are deemed not to be able to make decisions about their own safety. In which case survival is entirely the responsibility of the medical staff rather than the patient. So everything has to be tried. In other cases other things have been tried. In at least some of these this has been seen as blundering and inhumane, but that is a different issue. The very fact that mental capacity was based about indicates to me that other things would have been done if it was considered absent.
Based on what was said at the inquiry we do
Irregardless of capacity they were unwilling to try any alternatives, really it’s a moot point.I don't follow. We know that mental capacity was mentioned. That can only have been relevant if it would have affected policy. I didn't see any reference to what would have been done if the answer on capacity had been different.
Irregardless of capacity they were unwilling to try any alternatives
It was discussed at length in the inquest. Can’t consider a PEG due to lack of washing, can’t consider TPN the stomach would stop working, I don’t recall but it’s there in the reporting, Dr Roy seemed very strident.Where did it say that? It is important if true.
It was discussed at length in the inquest. Can’t consider a PEG due to lack of washing, can’t consider TPN the stomach would stop working, I don’t recall but it’s there in the reporting, Dr Roy seemed very strident.
I distinctly remember the “non-working stomach/use it or lose it forever” debate, and I didn’t think that referred to PEG (or NJ or PEJ)But wasn't that all said in the context of it being established that she had mental capacity?
And my memory is that PEG was not mentioned, only TPN.
For people without mental capacity you do whatever it takes to try to keep them alive. My understanding is that the objections to TPN assumed that the patient was going to be autonomous.
Agree about the debate about the non-working stomach. The drs in hospital only considered the NG tube I thought?I distinctly remember the “non-working stomach/use it or lose it forever” debate, and I didn’t think that referred to PEG (or NJ or PEJ)
I distinctly remember the “non-working stomach/use it or lose it forever” debate, and I didn’t think that referred to PEG (or NJ or PEJ)
I don't know whether it did or didn't but my point was that I don't think PEG was even mentioned.
And I think it very likely that this argument is only made when it is thought that if the patient is not 'over-medicalised' by offering artificial feeding they will eventually get around to eating themselves and survive. That is to say that they are in the 'functional' group that has, in some self-contradictory sort of way 'mental capacity, which I suspect was an assumption being made throughout when this debate was raised.