The ethics of life and death
A major European study conducted by the Coma Science Group (ULg, The University Hospital of Liege) shows that within the medical community, opinions about end-of-life decisions for patients who are in a chronic vegetative or minimally conscious state are influenced by whether or not these patients are believed to be able to feel physical pain. The study was published in the Journal Neuroethics. The ethical debate surrounding altered states of consciousness is far from over. The debate is all the more delicate in view of the fact that several studies undertaken over the last few years have shown that one in three or even two in five “bedside” clinical diagnoses were erroneous. Thus, some people are declared to be in what is known in today’s terminology as a vegetative state although they are in a minimally conscious state or even in locked-in syndrome (see Immured in a motionless body). Yet, in a minimally conscious state, the patient shows clear signs of consciousness even though these may fluctuate and in locked-in syndrome, their consciousness remains intact in a despairingly motionless body. Moreover, a study conducted by the Coma Science Group of the Cyclotron Research Centre (CRC) of the University of Liege and the Neurology department of the University Hospital of Liege (published in 2008 in The Lancet Neurology (1)) showed that, in contrast with patients who are in a vegetative/non-responsive state, patients who are in a minimally conscious state are capable of feeling pain and emotions; it is therefore necessary to supply them with analgesic medication. ![]() (1) M. Boly, M.-E. Faymonville, C. Schnakers, Ph. Peigneux, B. Lambermont, C. Phillips, P. Lancellotti, A. Luxen, M. Lamy, G. Moonen, P. Maquet et S. Laureys, Perception of pain in the minimally conscious state with PET activation : an observational study, in The Lancet Neurology, 2008. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
© 2007 ULi�ge
|
||