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Caring for
life
PASTORAL LETTER
FROM THE NORDIC BISHOPS CONFERENCE
ON
MEDICAL CARE
AT THE FINAL STAGES OF LIFE
Life is a precious gift. Throughout the centuries this conviction has
been the inspiration for many to defend and protect the weakest members
of society. This is especially the case in the field of healthcare
where Christians have found a meaningful way to assist their neighbour
and to bear witness to the love God has for all his people.
In the Nordic counties we have an advanced medical care system
that
meets our requirements for medical treatment. However the expectations
of society for even better care and quality of life, as well as the
astounding achievements made in the field of medical science, present
us with new challenges. This is especially the case regarding medical
care at the final stages of life and also regarding the issue of
euthanasia. These questions are and will continue to become
increasingly topical. We, the catholic bishops of the Nordic countries,
would like to shed light upon these issues based on the message of the
Gospel and the tradition of the Catholic Church.
In this letter we will first of all unfold and analyse the
situation
today in society and in healthcare. Subsequently the answers given by
Revelation to ³the eternal questions" will be presented. We will
go on
to develop a theological analysis of the situation by expounding the
teaching of the Church on these questions. Finally a number of
suggestions will be presented, which hopefully can promote respect for
the sick and the dying in our Nordic countries.
1. Social background
1. 1
Demographic development
During the last hundred years great advances have been made in
improving and prolonging human life. As a result of this scientific and
technical revolution, the advances made in medical science, the
mastering and control of many dangerous illnesses, better hygiene and
food, the average life expectancy has increased. Towards the end of the
19th century a citizen of our countries had an expected lifespan of 50
years. Today we have an average life expectancy of about 78 years,
statistically among the highest in the world.
Higher standards of living have also lead to lower birth
rates. While
fewer children are being born and individuals live longer, the
populations of our societies are becoming older. The percentage of the
population of the Nordic countries over the age of 65 is now 15 percent
and is expected to rise continually. In fifty years as much as 45
percent of the Nordic population could be older than 65 years.
Certainly, developments in medical science, especially in preventive
medicine, genetics, surgery and cancer research will lead to even
longer life. But since death is an inevitable fact in human life,
questions regarding medical care at the final stages of life will
increase in importance and topicality.
1. 2
The changed attitude within society towards death
During the course of history the attitude of our Nordic societies
towards death has changed. In the past death was seen as a natural part
of life and always close at hand due to the risk of dying while giving
birth, infant mortality, accidents at work and many epidemic illnesses.
In most cases the sick were taken care of at home. They were a part of
a social network that generally was responsible for human care and
dignity. When people died there were rites, symbols and actions,
especially funerals, which belonged to the culture. Death was a part of
life and the dead were honoured.
With the advances and improvements in modern medicine the
moment of
death is no longer seen to coincide with the moment the heart ceases to
beat. Modern intensive care has made it possible to prolong life in a
way that in the past was seen as insurmountable. The process of dying
has thus been prolonged and can to a great extent be controlled. In the
past illnesses and diseases which led to death within a short period of
time can now many times be treated. Moreover, today with the help of
heart and lung machines or artificial organs life can be sustained in a
mechanical way. These possibilities bring the following questions to a
head: What is life? What is the meaning of suffering? What is death and
when exactly does one die? Even other difficult questions are brought
to the fore: Are we always obliged to sustain life as long as possible?
Or is it sometimes allowed to discontinue medical treatment to allow a
patient to die? Are we allowed to ease a patient¹s severe pain and
accept that his life will thus be shortened?
When intensive care was developed during the 1960's it was a
clear and obvious fact that the first priority of medical care was to
save life. Patients received intensive treatment with an abundance of
technical apparatus that certainly sustained life but which also often
entailed that a patient¹s spiritual and psychological needs were
not
seen as important. Death became institutionalised and individualised,
ie. moved from the home to the more anonymous environment of a hospital
where a patient often awaited death without the presence or help of
relatives. This resulted in that death, for many, became an unknown
reality. Even today various studies show that only one in ten people
aged twenty-five have experienced the death of someone close to them.
Death is becoming an abstraction, something that does not exist and
thus something we need not concern ourselves with. One speaks even
about the genesis of history first ³free-from-death generation".
It is
only when accidents and catastrophes occur that death receives greater
attention.
In recent years the intensive technical treatment of the
incurably sick
and of dying patients, which characterised medical care at the end of
the 1900's, has been questioned. We have seen that questions regarding
the quality of life are just as important - and in some cases more
important - for patients than access to effective medical treatment.
The same studies, as mentioned above, show that an increasing number of
people die at home, in old people's homes or other specific forms of
housing. The same studies show that relatively few people die alone.
There is a positive and increased awareness that death is an important
and difficult process in a person¹s life in which one needs other
people's support and human warmth. But since many elderly people live
alone and death for many is a long process, these people are still very
vulnerable. During the last few years it has become clear that the
national health system does not always give elderly people the care
they need.
1. 3
The changed task of medical care
Modern medicine began with the Greek Hippocrates of Kos (c. 460-377
BC). Traditionally it has been distinguished by three characteristics:
1) it is free from political and religious affiliations, 2) it is
founded on scientifically proven methods, 3) the work of doctors is
regulated by independent professional ethics, consisting of firm
obligations and prohibitions. According to Hippocratic ethics, a doctor
has a personal responsibility, if possible, to cure, often to relieve
but always to console his patient, but also to refrain from dangerous,
harmful or lethal forms of treatment like abortion or euthanasia, even
if the patient himself requests it.
Modern medical care challenges this view regarding the roll of
the
doctor and the purpose of medicine. The close proximity, which existed
in earlier times between doctor and patient, is being in many ways
replaced by a developed and sophisticated technocracy and bureaucracy.
Certainly the patient generally receives appropriate care but the
existential and ethical questions, which may arise in relation to his
treatment, are seldom given sufficient attention. Due to the demands
made for greater efficiency and the priority given to economic issues
within the healthcare system medical care workers are often forced to
work at a high tempo and thus find it difficult to view patients as
fellow human beings. When the distance between doctor and patient
increases, the different and varied fields of application given to
medicine are on the increase and when the general public gains clearer
insights into how the healthcare system is run, there is a risk that
medical care can become an ideology, ie. the risk that it becomes an
instrument in fostering fixed individual, social or political goals.
In our multicultural context it can be difficult to agree on
how we
together can resolve ethical issues. However, we may never be content
with accepting the lowest common denominator as a norm and delegating
to each individual the right to rule over life itself. When we in our
society wish to have a moral foundation, we must learn from the
experience and wisdom, which are conveyed by the traditions that from
the beginning contributed to strengthen and secure the fundamental
values of society. Thus, this letter is not just meant for the Catholic
Christians of the Nordic countries. We will also explain to other
Christians and to all those of good will how our own tradition wrestles
with questions of life and death and how it in theory and praxis can
contribute to defend and protect the inviolability of human life.
2. The testimony of the Bible
The biblical view of life has as its starting point that
God
created life and finds joy in it. It is this that gives life its value
and dignity.
2. 1
The Old Testament
Man is created in the image and likeness of God (Gen 1:27). But his
awareness of being related to God developed rather slowly throughout
the history of Israel. At the beginning of his long journey in faith,
man becomes very soon aware that he is alive and that this physical
existence is in itself of great dignity. In many ways the Bible speaks
about the eternal value of life and of man's gratitude to God for the
great gift he has been given. He rejoices that he is not dead and that
he can praise God. His continued existence is seen by him as proof of
God's blessing. Death entails that the service of worship which life
is, is broken. He passes into a meaningless shadowy existence, Scheol,
where he no longer can praise God. Therefore the psalmist cries:
What profit would my death be, my going to the grave? Can dust
give you praise or proclaim your truth? (Ps 30:10)
This insight that man is called to a life with God comes
successively. If Israel fears God and keeps his laws and commandments
long life is promised to coming generations (Deut 6:2). Man is exhorted
to make a fundamental moral standpoint: "See, I have set before you
this day life and good, death and evil" (Deut 30:15).
Life and goodness belong together. Without life there are no
prerequisites for goodness and for all the other positive values of
life, how unpretentious they may be. However, as we all are well aware,
life is not always happiness and bliss. Due to the transitoriness of
human life we come into contact with its imperfection, which is
especially expressed in sickness, suffering and death. The Bible bears
witness to the constant experience of the suffering person. Holy Writ
does not paint a pretty picture of human existence. Instead it reminds
us that misfortune indiscriminately befalls the believer as well as the
non-believer, the virtuous as well as evildoers. Job, God's virtuous
and faithful servant, experienced his due share of misfortune and
sorrow. The Book of Job portrays suffering in a rich and succinct
manner. In one passage Job says:
"Why is light given to him that is in misery, and life to the
bitter in soul, who long for death, but it comes not, and dig for it
more than for hid treasures; who rejoice exceedingly, and are glad,
when they find the grave? Why is light given to a man whose way is hid,
whom God has hedged in? For my sighing comes as my bread, and my
groanings are poured out like water. For the thing that I fear comes
upon me, and what I dread befalls me. I am not at ease, nor am I quiet;
I have no rest; but trouble comes." (Job 3:20-26)
Even in the abyss of suffering, man can find God. In his
vulnerability he becomes aware that he cannot save himself. He needs
help from somewhere else. Slowly Israel deepens her insight that the
covenant she entered into with the Lord is not meant to secure the
people's political success. Instead Israel is to bear witness to
salvation in a deeper way for other lands and peoples. Through the
prophets the people of God learn to understand that temporary setbacks,
suffering and even death do not mean that God has abandoned them. God,
who is almighty and merciful, will, in the end, defeat death. Yes,
there is hope. Nothing is lost in God's plan of salvation. Not even
death is an obstacle for God.
"Thy dead shall live, their bodies shall rise. O dwellers in
the dust,
awake and sing for joy! For thy dew is a dew of light, and on the land
of the shades thou wilt let it fall" (Is 26:19).
2. 2
The New Testament
Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the world, fulfils God's promise of a new
creation. He is truly the One who is "life" itself and "the light of
all men" (Joh 1:4). By becoming man God wished to show us how our lives
should be. When Jesus Christ dies and rises again death is annihilated
and through baptism we are partakers in this mystery and are part of
his life. In Christ we are no longer subject to the realms of death.
During his earthly existence Jesus defended and supported life
in many
ways. He heals the sick, he forgives sinners, he consoles the grieved
and even gives life to many who have died. Furthermore, he teaches his
disciples to dissociate themselves from violence and to treat all
people equally, no matter their origin, faith or way of life. He is
always in the service of life and shows in his actions what he promised
in words: he has come: "that we may have life, and have it abundantly"
(Joh 10:10).
Even though Jesus was God, he does not act as if he were
superior, but
as a fellow human being. He can rid the world of calamity, illness and
death but, instead, he subjects himself to these conditions in order to
share our humanity. As it is written about Christ in the letter to the
Hebrews: "For because he himself has suffered and been tempted, he is
able to help those who are tempted" (Heb 2:18). By his suffering and
death he voluntarily took upon himself the whole of humanity's
individual and collective failures and weaknesses. On the Cross, Jesus
came to know man's experience of hopelessness when he exclaimed: "My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" (cf Ps 22:2; Matt 27:46; Mark
15:34). He is there with all those who suffer. The Cross reveals God's
love and care. Hopelessness and death do not have the last word. By his
resurrection on the third day Jesus unveiled for us the victory of life
and the meaning and goal of human life. Man is not meant for the grave
but called to share in the glory of God for all eternity. Jesus wanted
to continue his work on earth. Therefore he called his disciples and
gave them the role of leadership among believers. Jesus gave them this
exhortation: "Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out
demons. You received without paying, give without pay" (Matt 10:8). In
the Acts of the Apostles we read how the disciples after Jesus' death
and resurrection, heal the sick as a sign of salvation through him. Man
is not at the mercy of blind fate, but is called to enter into a new
relationship with God where bodily and spiritual health is a sign of
the coming of the kingdom of God. In Christ the whole of creation finds
itself in a state of transformation where death and corruption
constantly are pushed aside in order to make room for a new creation.
Therefore Paul writes: "For this perishable nature must put on the
imperishable, and this mortal nature must put on immortality. When the
perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on
immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: "Death
is swallowed up in victory. ' "O death, where is thy victory? O death,
where is thy sting?'" (1 Cor 15:53-55).
In summary: the Bible teaches us that life is something good
and
desirable which God has given to us as a gift and over which he alone
rules. Human life is thus inviolable. At the same time we also learn to
hope for something better that will come. We are called to eternal
life. Our biological existence here on earth is thus not an absolute
good. Life need not be prolonged at all costs and it can be given as a
gift for the benefit of others. Jesus cured many but he himself died
for us on the Cross in order to win for us the Kingdom of God and to
prepare a place for us in the embrace of the Father. The disciples
continue in the name of Christ to assist the sick and the weak but they
themselves are prepared to die in order to bear witness to life after
death.
3. The Christian view of medical care
The Church has always preached about works of mercy as a
way for
the faithful to imitate Christ and to show Christian love in concrete
actions. By giving food to the hungry, water to the thirsty, clothes to
the naked, dwelling to the stranger and care to the sick we bear
witness, just as the first Christians did, that God loves all people
and that his kingdom is among us. But since we meet Christ in the needy
and the suffering, we who help are not better than those who receive
help. He who takes care of a fellow human being is a disciple of Christ
who said: "I was sick and you visited me" (Matt 25:36).
Care of the sick must therefore be seen as a meeting of equal
persons
where both he who administers care and he who receives care enrich each
other. In this meeting spontaneous reactions arise which we all
recognise as an expression of our natural tendency to help people in
need and our natural reaction to trust the sense of responsibility of
other people and their professional competence. When these positive and
spontaneous reactions or "manifestations of life" take place mutual
trust and confidence between the people concerned arise and it is this
which is the foundation of medical care.
3. 1
The dignity of the patient
A patient may never be seen only as "a case" or be reduced to a body
that must be treated. Because every individual has an inherent dignity,
a patient is first of all a fellow human being. Therefore the patient,
if it is possible, or his relations, must be informed and consulted
before any treatment involving him commences or is discontinued and
also when medical tests are to be taken. A patient must be seen as the
vulnerable human being he is and thus receive help in the difficult
situation in which he finds himself when he becomes seriously ill.
Medical treatment must be seen from an holistic perspective which
embraces the personal needs of the patient.
3. 2
Then dignity and vocation of medical care workers
Doctors and nurses may never be regarded only as a means to be used by
someone else. They are not just professional and skilled workers paced
at the disposal of society or individual patients. According to the
Christian position these people have a special vocation and are
entrusted with the great responsibility of caring for ill people.
Included in this responsibility is an ethical form well tried by
experience - the Hippocratic tradition - that strengthens them in their
commitment to the service of human life. This ethical tradition within
the medical profession must be respected. Doctors and nurses have "a
grave and clear obligation to oppose [any actions that are contrary to
the ethical tradition within medical care] by conscientious objection",
especially abortion and euthanasia. We appreciate the initiatives which
have been taken in many of our dioceses to found associations and
networks of Catholic doctors. These associations and networks can give
our doctors an excellent opportunity to exchange experiences, to gain
further education in ethics and to enter more deeply into their
Christian identity in the service of life.
3. 3
Other concerned parties
Finally, it is part of the Christian position regarding medical care to
also take into consideration any other concerned parties. Medical care
is not an isolated reality that only touches the life of the patient
and the medical staff. It is also a part of a greater context. After
the patient himself, those who bear the main responsibility for the
well being of the patient are his relatives. It is important that these
people are given the opportunity to get all necessary help from society
when they need it in order to care for their relative at home. If this
is not possible, then hospitals and medical care establishments must
implement measures allowing relatives the opportunity of visiting as
often as is possible for them and, if they so wish, allowing them to
actively partake in the medical care given to the patient.
Everything that takes place in our hospitals and medical care
establishments also concerns many other people, both directly and
indirectly. For example, the general public's trust and confidence in
medical care are jeopardised when immoral treatments are accepted and
if one cannot trust that doctors and nurses always put the well being
of the patient first. It is also important to be reminded that the
resources given to medical care are limited and that there are also
other areas which are of importance for the common good of society, eg.
schools, social work, aid to developing countries, research, culture,
care of the handicapped and care of the elderly. Health must,
therefore, be seen as one of the many values that society must promote.
It is not the only one. One must ask oneself if it is acceptable from a
Christian perspective that more and more money is invested in order to
meet our growing demands for better health and quality of life when
other people in our world lack even the most basic necessities of life.
The Church presupposes an holistic view regarding medical
care. One
should not only care for the patient's physical well being but also his
psychological and spiritual needs. Man is not just a body and does not
live "on bread alone" (Matt 4:4). Man is a person. Freedom and self
fulfilment are values that must be protected. This implies that neither
patient nor doctor and medical care workers are to be subjected to
political pressure or undue scientific ambitions. They may not be lead
into acting unethically by subjecting either the sick or the healthy
for oppression. One has always to view the issue of health from a
perspective that proceeds from respect for and love of every human
being.
4. Questions in connection to medical care at the final
stages of life
According to the Christian faith death is not the end of
existence but a transition to a new form of life. "For God so loved the
world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should
not perish but have eternal life" (Joh 3:16). Therefore all those who
die in Christ can look forward to seeing God face to face. None the
less the process of dying, just as the process of being born, can be
very painful. The dying person can experience fear and anxiety since he
is faced with an unknown reality and begins to lose his ability to
breathe, to perceive and to exist in space and time. Therefore it is
important that a dying person is surrounded by human warmth and care,
that he is given all necessary spiritual guidance and comfort and has
qualified medical treatment at hand, especially for the alleviation of
pain.
In the Sacrament of the Sick the Church offers unsurpassed
grace and
comfort. This sacrament is not only meant for those who are at the
brink of death but can also be received by those who are seriously ill,
or those who feel weak due to the advancement of years. Its principal
grace "is one of strengthening, peace and courage to overcome the
difficulties that go with the condition of serious illness or the
frailty of old age" (Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1520). It is
important to give the sick members of our parishes the possibility of
receiving the sacraments of reconciliation, communion and anointing of
the sick. The responsibility of spiritually accompanying and comforting
the dying is not just that of the priest. Relatives, friends, medical
staff and other fellow human beings can by their very presence at the
side of the sick and, eg. reading passages from Sacred Scripture, be a
source of great comfort.
4. 1
Alleviation of pain
Human life is transitory and therefore, unavoidably, involves a certain
amount of pain and suffering. God does not desire that we should
suffer; therefore we are not to consciously look for physical or
psychological trials. None the less, when such trials occur they are
given meaning in the life of a Christian. Through our trials we can be
united with Christ who suffered for us and who in a mysterious way
still suffers together with his Church. Therefore the apostle Paul
could write: "Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my
flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake
of his body, that is, the church" (Col 1:24). He who suffers can thus
offer up his discomfort or afflictions for the sake of someone else and
by his prayers be united with and pray for other people who are being
tested. Therefore a patient can of his own accord refrain from
accepting treatment for the alleviation of pain. However one may never
come to the conclusion that every ill patient would make this choice.
Severe pain can weaken a person's courage, weaken his life of
prayer
and in other ways be an obstacle in receiving appropriate care at the
final stages of life. Therefore the Church teaches that doctors are to
provide a high standard of treatment for the alleviation of pain and
assume that patients who cannot give their consent would request this
treatment. It is true that treatment of patients with analgesic drugs
can in rare cases shorten their lives. This risk can be tolerated under
the condition that the prescribed doses are within the limits for what
is seen as a high standard of medical praxis and that the intention is
no other than the alleviation of pain.
We hereby wish to emphasize the importance of a high standard
of
palliative care at the final stages of life. This care, which aims to
alleviate the pains of illness and to integrate the patient's physical,
psychosocial and spiritual needs, ought to be an obvious element in
medical treatment, given to all those who need it, started at the
appropriate time and pursued until the patient passes away. No patient
who suffers from an incurable illness is to be seen as "fully treated"
from a medical point of view.
4. 2
Termination of intensive medical treatment
There are other situations where a patient receives intensive care and
his life is maintained mechanically, eg. respirators. The question then
arises if it is morally acceptable to discontinue intensive treatment
and allow the patient to die if his health cannot be restored.
According to the tradition and teaching of the Church, a
balance must
always be achieved between the proposed method of treatment and its
benefits and the possible negative consequences, including all medical
risks, pain or fear. According to this teaching a patient is in
principle obliged to allow himself be receive treatment and a doctor
obliged to provide the treatment - if the treatment has a reasonable
chance of restoring the patient's health and does not entail all too
many negative factors. However a doctor is not simply morally obliged
to begin or continue treatment if the medical benefits are negligible
in proportion to other pains or difficulties, and if therapy only
prolongs the process of death. The decision to possibly terminate a
life sustaining treatment obviously must be taken only after
consultation with the patient, with his relations if he is not
conscious and if necessary with other specialists. Irrespective of the
choice made, the regular care of the patient must continue. To
terminate medical treatment in these or similar cases is not a form of
"passive" euthanasia or mercy killing.
4. 3
Euthanasia
Even when a patient is irrevocably in the process of dying and there is
no possibility of saving his life, a doctor is the protector and
servant of life. This also applies to those close to the patient.
However, there are many voices in society which advocate that a doctor
ought to be allowed to intentionally kill a patient if the patient
requests it or gives his permission.
In the strict sense of the word, euthanasia means "an action
or
omission which of itself and by intention causes death, with the
purpose of eliminating all suffering. Euthanasia's terms of reference,
therefore, are to be found in the intention of the will and in the
methods used". A request for mercy killing is often grounded in the
need for dialogue, in depression, in a state of anxiety when faced with
death or the fear of being an overwhelming encumbrance to the medical
system or a burden for relatives. These fears and apprehensions must
naturally be taken seriously. Medical care workers must therefore be
close to the suffering patient and by loving care give support both to
the patient himself and his family. The position of palliative care
must therefore be strengthened so that medical care workers become more
qualified in this field and thus be of benefit to the patient. However,
not all patients who need treatment for the alleviation of pain receive
it and, unfortunately, are not always received in an appropriate
manner. Compared to other more prestigious medical fields, eg. genetics
or surgery, palliative care is still given low priority and neglected.
Politicians, medical care workers and relatives have thus an important
task to make sure that in many different ways the final stages of life
also become a meaningful period in the life of each person. Studies
have also confirmed that which medical care workers, pastors of souls
and relatives already ascertained: the final stages of life can also be
a time full of unexpected possibilities, and even become a source of
joy both for the terminally ill patient and those close to him.
In the ethical debate it is often argued that euthanasia
should be
allowed since every person has the right to decide over his own body
and his own life. Receiving help to commit suicide or to kill another
human being is, however, not a personal matter or private affair. Man
is a social being who is part of a community. What we do with our
bodies and our lives concerns others. Other people also need to be
protected. Euthanasia is an immoral action because it violates the
bodily integrity of its victims, it violates the person who has to
perform this deed and violates other people especially the handicapped,
who despite difficult trials in life wish to continue living a worthy
life. These people, who often feel extremely vulnerable in the debate
on euthanasia, need the support of society by, among things, hearing it
clearly proclaimed that life is always inviolable and worthy to be
lived, despite one's medical condition or supposed social advantage.
Owing to all these reasons it is important that human life is protected
right up to the moment of death and that euthanasia is not allowed by
law. Besides the fact that euthanasia is contrary to the ethics of
medical care workers, it does not take the possibilities of palliative
care into consideration and that violating the integrity of the human
person is also a serious sin against God who has commanded us not to
kill ( Ex 20:13; Deut 5:17). Therefore Pope John Paul II, in his
encyclical Evangelium vitae, confirms, "In harmony with the Magisterium
of my Predecessors and in communion with the Bishops of the Catholic
Church, I confirm that euthanasia is a grave violation of the law of
God, since it is the deliberate and morally unacceptable killing of a
human person."
4. 4
Terminal sedation
Lately in our Nordic countries a new form of euthanasia is being
discussed. The term "terminal sedation" is used to describe an action
that involves a doctor anaesthetising a dying patient and discontinuing
all medical treatment until death occurs. In these cases death usually
occurs within a few days and up to a week after being anaesthetised.
Advocates of this action maintain that it is an acceptable and legal
form of euthanasia because it contains two elements that are allowed
today: the administering of an anaesthetic and the termination of
treatment.
Since the intention and purpose of this action is to kill the
patient,
terminal sedation should be seen as a regular form of euthanasia and
thus forbidden. The distinguishing factor between this method and other
methods where a patient's live is intentionally brought to a close, is
the instruments that are used. Terminal sedation is in itself also
problematic and uncertain. Medical praxis has shown that patients can
experience pain and discomfort even when anaesthetised. In a situation
like this terminal sedation would irrevocably deprive the patient of
the possibility of awaking and requesting help. To deny a patient the
possibility of communicating with those around him in such a definitive
way, and possibly changing his opinion on how he should be treated, is
seriously unethical.
4. 5
Donation of organs, tissue and cells
From a biological point of view death is not an instantaneous event but
more or less a prolonged process in which the unitary and integrated
functions of the body gradually decline. In the past the moment of
death was normally linked to the moment the heart ceased to beat. The
possibility of sustaining a person's blood circulation using artificial
means has made this assumption problematic and brought to the fore the
insight that a person's identity is foremost connected to his potential
or his actual possibility of being self-aware, of reflecting and of
communicating with others. When this faculty is irrevocably lost (what
is usually termed brain death) a person can also be regarded as dead.
The Church does not use medical criteria to define death, but through
theological and philosophical reasoning has arrived at the same
conclusion as medical science, which implies that she implicitly
accepts the so called brain death criterion. The Church's competence
lies in theology and philosophy. Therefore the Holy Father said
recently: "In this regard, it is helpful to recall that the death of
the person is a single event, consisting in the total disintegration of
that unitary and integrated whole that is the personal self. It results
from the separation of the life-principle (or soul) from the corporal
reality of the person."
These theoretical questions are of great relevance today due
to the
possibilities we have of, among other things, being able to make use of
the organs, tissues and cells of a deceased person and transplanting
them in order to help seriously ill people. With the great shortage of
donated organs etc. which we have today in the Nordic Countries, this
possibility of saving other peoples' lives, by donating our bodies
after death, should be welcomed. The donation of an organ can be a
person's last free act of love on earth. Therefore we encourage all
Catholics in our dioceses to promote the culture of life by taking a
definite position in this important question.
The donation of an organ should even be seen within the field
of
medical care as a free act of love that embraces the whole person.
Therefore the consent to be an organ donor is to be confirmed clearly
with the help of a high standard of medical praxis before any surgical
act on the dead body takes place. It is also important that the body of
the deceased donor is treated with respect.
5. The contribution of the Church to medical care in the
Nordic Countries
Since the time when the Nordic countries became Christian,
the
Church has been an important social figure in society and has always
assisted the poor, the sick, prisoners and other marginalised people.
This is especially the case with religious orders of sisters who have
conveyed the care of the Church to the sick and weak here in the North.
5. 1
Catholic medical care in the Nordic Region
After the reformation, the Catholic Church returned to the Nordic
countries during the 19th and 20th centuries. Gradually it made itself
know in different areas of society. This is seen most clearly when the
Church manifested itself through its special work for the sick and the
elderly. Up to our own time religious congregations of sisters and
brothers have taken upon themselves the responsibility of looking after
seriously ill people and the dying by giving them security and comfort.
In many ways they have worked to relieve their pains and helped them to
bear their fear and anguish. Moreover they have tried to help patients
be reconciled to God by receiving the sacraments: confession, Holy
Eucharist and anointing of the sick. Today it is not usually religious
sisters and brothers who exercise this apostolate, but individual
catholic doctors and nurses in public hospitals and medical care
establishments. Together with other people of good will they engage
themselves in giving love and aid to the sick and the dying so that
they with dignity can enter into eternal life.
5. 2.
New initiatives
In order to help terminally ill people be treated with care and respect
for God as the Lord of Life, several houses for hospice care have been
established under Catholic and ecumenical management.
6. Summary
In this pastoral letter we the bishops of the Nordic
countries,
have attempted to draw attention to certain questions asked today in
relation to medical care at the final stages of life. These questions
have been elucidated by analysing the situation today with the help of
the testimony of revelation and the teaching of the Church, by
explaining the principles which are the foundation of Catholic
philosophy regarding medical care and finally to apply these principles
to concrete questions. These principles have their starting point in
the experience of our relationship with God throughout history and the
knowledge of the Gospel of the salvation of man in Christ Jesus.
However, our philosophy regarding medical care has also its starting
point in the convictions we share with many other people of good will.
Among these common convictions, we can mention respect for the
inviolability of human life and the equality of all human beings, our
special responsibility for the weakest members of society and respect
for the integrity of the medical profession.
Many of these values today are being questioned by short
sighted
scientific and political interests and also current ideas that isolate
the human person from community. As we called attention to earlier, the
danger with this type of individualistic mentality, which among other
things asserts the right to euthanasia, is that other concerned parties
are forgotten. The request for euthanasia must be taken seriously;
however not by allowing the patient to be killed but by attending to
him in the process of dying until his life comes to an end in a natural
way and commending it into the hands of God.
Death is a natural occurrence, which in its own time, must be
accepted
by all and which ultimately is the doorway into a new life with God.
But as long as we live it is life itself, a wonderful gift from God,
that we are called to serve, especially among our seriously ill
brothers and sisters. Together with Pope John Paul II, we reject a
"culture of death". We respond to his call for a "general mobilisation
of consciences and a united ethical effort to activate a great campaign
in support of life." We hope that this letter will help to contribute
in promoting a "culture of life" in the Nordic Countries. But above all
we hope that it will promote respect for the human person, created in
the image and likeness of God, redeemed in Christ and called to eternal
life.
Exhortations and suggestions
1. We urgently request the elected members of our
parliaments and
our governments to further develop palliative care in our Nordic
Countries. The terminally ill and the dying need more help and support
at the final stages of life. According to our position, euthanasia is
an unacceptable alternative which undermines the importance of
palliative care and jeopardises human dignity. No person should ever be
given the possibility of taking the life of an innocent fellow human
being. Therefore euthanasia should continue to be forbidden.
2. We request all the Catholic Christians in the Nordic
Countries to be
especially attentive to the situation of the sick in our churches.
Therefore we suggest that in every parish, according to their needs and
their possibilities, draw up a pastoral plan so that the elderly and
the sick receive regular visits and the possibility of receiving
communion if they cannot come to church. This Apostolate of Visitation
can if needed be exercised by trained ministers of the Eucharist who
have been appointed thereto by the bishop.
3. We exhort all parish priests to regularly provide the
sacrament of the sick in their respective parishes. We suggest that the
sacrament be celebrated communally, appropriately within the
celebration of the Eucharist in order to emphasise the communal bond
among and with the sick.
4. We encourage Catholic teachers, nurses and pastors of souls
to
receive further education in palliative care and to be aware of the
special medical and spiritual needs of the dying. We welcome also
private initiatives to found houses for hospice care under Christian
management.
5. We exhort all our fellow Christian brothers and sisters and
all
people of good will to actively promote respect for life and actively
partake in the general debate and in democratic processes so that the
inviolability of human life will increasingly become more respected in
our society.
World Day of Prayer for the Sick,
11 February 2002
+ Gerhard Schwenzer, Bishop of Oslo, Chairman of the Nordic Bishops'
Conference
+ Anders Arborelius, Bishop of Stockholm, Deputy chairman
of the Nordic Bishop's Conference
+ Czeslaw Kozon, Bishop of Copenhagen
+ Johannes B. M. Gijsen, Bishop of Reykjavík
+ Józef Wróbel, Bishop of Helsinki
+ Gerhard Goebel, Bishop-Prelate of Tromsö
+ Georg Muller, Bishop-Prelate of Trondheim
+ William Kenney, Auxiliary bishop of Stockholm
+ Hans Martensen, Bishop emeritus of Copenhagen
+ Hubertus Brandenburg, Bishop emeritus of Stockholm
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