The long tragic case of Terri Shiavo recently produced an
outpouring of response throughout the United States. Her
death was reported on April 1, 2005, nearly two weeks after life
support was removed in accord with a court order. Terri
Shiavo suffered severe brain damage in 1990 when she collapsed at
home after suffering a heart attack. She was eventually
deemed by the Florida courts to be in a "persistently vegetative
state." A long legal battle between her husband and legal
guardian -who believed that she would not have wanted to live in
her condition-and her parents began in 1998 in the Florida state
courts when he first asked the court for permission to remove her
life support. Her parents believed that she might improve
with therapy and petitioned the courts not to order her food and
hydration removed. Her case was reviewed by medical ethics
teams and ethics committees several times. Her husband
eventually prevailed in Florida state courts. Legal
proceedings finally ended up in Federal Courts after President
George W. Bush signed into law legislation passed by Congress which
gave her parents access to Federal courts. The Federal courts
declined to order reinsertion of life support after the Florida
courts refused to do so. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to
reverse lower court rulings.
We present two thoughtful and contrasting Lutheran comments on the
circumstances surrounding her recent death for reflection and
deliberation by JLE readers about the end-of-life matters raised by
her case. William Rodriguez argues from Stanley Hauerwas'
vision of the church as a community of character that her family
should have been allowed to care for her indefinitely and that life
support should not have been withdrawn. ELCA Bishop Edward
Benoway wrote a pastoral letter to members of his Florida-Bahamas
Synod based on the ELCA "Message on End of Life Decisions" and said
that withdrawing life support may be morally responsible when such
treatment "will not lead to improved health, and is preventing
natural death from occurring. . . ."
JLE readers will find the full text of the Message on End of Life
Decisions at:
http://www.elca.org/socialstatements/endoflifedecisions/