The Island Guardian
Locally Owned & Operated
- islandguardian.com -
(360) 378-8243 - 305 Blair Avenue, Friday Harbor, WA 98250
The Island Guardian is a member of the Society of Professional Journalists
xx Home | News | Business | Environment | Lifestyles | Entertainment | Columnists | Archives | Classifieds | Nag
News
Current news
Government News
Political News
Service Organizations
Editorials
Obituaries
Guest Editorials
Business
Business
Real Estate
Environment
Environment
Weekly Nag
Weekly Nag
Letters to Editor
Letters to Editor
To Contact the Editor

Wednesday, March 30th

Protecting Your Right To Die



By William J. Weissinger

As everyone who reads a paper or watches the national news now knows, in 1990 a woman named Terri Schiavo suffered brain damage when her heart stopped briefly from a chemical imbalance. Since that time, she has been in a persistent vegetative state while her husband and her parents have battled in Court – and no doubt in person – about whether or not she should be disconnected from the tube sustaining her body with food and water.

In his poem Mending Wall, Robert Frost said that "Good fences make good neighbors." That isn't true only of the stone wall which Frost's old farmer was repairing; it is equally true in a less literal sense of legal barriers. In the Terri Schiavo case, the nation has seen the daily unfolding of a tragedy: the shell of a woman in a persistent vegetative state, kept on life support against what we are told were her wishes; her husband and her parents, who should have been united in grief now bitter enemies. And all for the lack of one simple piece of paper: a living will – or, as it is called in this state – a health care directive.

In a health care directive, one expresses how one wants to be treated if ever diagnosed by one's attending physician to be in a terminal condition or in a permanent unconscious condition, where the application of life sustaining treatment would serve only to artificially prolong the process of one's dying. Terri Schiavo's husband states that she told him that she would not want to be kept alive artificially under such conditions. A credible statement? Although his credibility has been attacked by conservative commentators –one even referring to him as a Nazi – the facts are simple. As an attorney who does estate-planning, I have had probably hundreds of clients in my office expressing their wishes in Health Care Directives. But in my 23 years of practice as an attorney, I can recall only one client out of those hundreds who wanted to be kept "plugged in" to life support systems if in a state such as Terri Schiavo's. Almost universally, clients want to be "unplugged."

Had Terri Schiavo expressed her wishes in writing, this family tragedy would never have happened. Ms. Schiavo, or whatever was left of her, would have been disconnected from her feeding tube, and her body would have been dead and buried 15 years ago.

It is not unusual that Terri Schiavo didn't have a Health Care Directive: few young people do. And yet, we have all seen what can happen if one doesn't. The message: everyone needs to sign a Health Care Directive. Estate planners also recommend a "belt and suspenders" approach of also signing a Health Care Power of Attorney, where one officially appoints an agent to make health care decisions for you if you are unable to make them yourself. A Health Care Power of Attorney gives the holder of it the right to make medical decisions for you when you can't make them yourself, such as hiring – or firing – a physician, or having you moved home from a hospital for your last days. A Health Care Power of Attorney is particularly important for those not living in traditional relationships, such as unmarried couples living together, since the medical establishment will not recognize the rights of even a long-time life-partner to have any involvement in the health care decisions of a patient, unless those rights have been solidified in a Health Care Power of Attorney.

A Health Care Directive need not be expensive. While Health Care Powers of Attorney are more complicated and normally would require the assistance of an attorney, the first line of defense – the Health Care Directive – does not. If you don't have an attorney or want to avoid the expense of going to one, you can do a Health Care Directive yourself. The language is set out in the State of Washington's statutes at RCW 70.122.030. Your attorney can add more muscle to what the State statute provides, but if all you have is the statutorily-provided language, that is much better than nothing.

Strong interest groups are attempting to make it harder to end the life of a "Terri Schiavo"-type patient who does not have a Health Care Directive in effect. Although Ms. Schiavo's husband has prevailed in his battle to allow Ms. Schiavo to die in accordance with what he has testified were her wishes, some commentators are now suggesting that in the absence of a living will, there should be a presumption that the person wants to live. "It is life, not death, that our constitution protects," said Andy McCarthy in his March 28, 2005 article in National Review Online, entitled "PVS and the End of Life." High sounding words that unfortunately ignore the reality that under the circumstances in which Ms. Schiavo is "living" (if one can call it that), in my experience estate-planning clients when asked almost universally say they would want to be "unplugged." Some politicians are anxious to lead the battle to keep that from happening. In his March 29th Op Ed column in the New York Times, Paul Krugman reported that "Tom DeLay … believes that he's on a mission to bring a ‘biblical worldview' to American politics, and that God brought him a brain-damaged patient to help him with that mission."

As we have all seen with the Terri Schiavo case, this is important. And changes that the Schiavo case may bring to State or Federal law make it more important. People commonly put off estate-planning matters: don't let that happen to you.

And finally, even a Health Care Directive or a Health Care Power of Attorney, once fully executed, won't do you any good if it's locked away in your safety deposit box and no one else knows it's there. Make sure that you've given a copy of it to your medical provider and to your parents, children and the other important people in your life who might be called upon to make a difficult decision.




About the author: William Weissinger was graduated with honors from the University of Chicago Law School in 1982. Since 1990 he has had a general law practice in the San Juan Islands, focusing on real estate and real-estate litigation, general business law, and estate planning.


[more..]


Sunday, March 27th

Medevac Bill



By John Evans

There is some significant progress to report in the ongoing effort to get legislation passed in the State legislature that would allow airlift medical flight subscription "insurance" to once again be available to the families of San Juan County. Senator Harriet Spanel's Senate Bill #2005 has passed in the Senate. While the modified bill is not exactly what had been hoped for…at authorizes a study with a report back to the legislature by the end of the year…it is forward progress.

The next step is a hearing on the House side companion bill #1996. This hearing takes place at 8:00 am this Tuesday. Representative Dave Quall is the sponsor of the House bill in close cooperation with Senator Spanel on the Senate side.

Vicki Kirkpatrict, Washington Association of Counties Policy Director for Public Health suggests that citizens make the effort to e mail the members of the House Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee on Monday and encourage their support of House Bill #1996.

The Committee members are as follows: Rep. Steve Kirby, Chair; Rep. Dan Roach, ranking minority rep; Rep. Sharon Tomiko, Rep. Shay Schual-Berke, Rep. Geoff Simpson, Rep. Brendan Williams, Rep. Cary Condotta, Rep Daniel Newhouse and Rep. John Serben. Their e mail address are easy to find on the web site, washingtonvotes.org.

The sole purpose of this effort is to once again allow a local subscription "insurance" program to be reestablished in San Juan County. The program that existed before allowed families, for a $50-$100 annual subscription, to "insure" against the cost of an emergency medical flight for a family member to a mainland emergency room. The cost of such a flight is between $7,000 and $10,000. Even very good general medical insurance policies usually do not cover the full cost of such an emergency flight.

This program used to exist in the islands, but was discontinued when the State Insurance Commissioner demanded that the provider of the subscription service meet all of the extensive, expensive and cumbersome State insurance regulations. Under the guise of protecting the citizens of the State, we have ended up with no program at all. Hopefully the legislative effort that is underway…with special thanks to Senator Spanel, Reprentitive Quall and the Association of Counties, Vicki Kirpatrick…will be successful.

Please do your part. E mail a committee member today.


Thank you.

[more..]


Lifestyles
Lifetstyles
Entertainment
Entertainment
Columnists
John Evans
Mary Kalbert
Ron Keeshan
Gordy Petersen
Piet Visser
Stephen Robins
Bill Weissinger
Amy Wynn
Terra Tamai
Classifieds
Classifieds
Helpful Links
Helpful Links
RSS Feed

Let the newspaper come to you with Real Simple Syndication

RSS Version


Web design by
The Computer Place

© 2008 The Island Guardian, Inc
All Rights Reserved.


Powered By Greymatter

To learn about this newspaper
or
how to place a free ad
or
to become contributor
click below:
About
The Island Guardian

or email:
publisher@
islandguardian.com