Beliefnet News

Beliefnet News

Vatican Rejects Pope Euthanasia Charges

posted by lsheahen | 7:46pm Wednesday September 26, 2007

By NICOLE WINFIELD
ROME (AP) — A doctor alleged Wednesday that Pope John Paul II violated Catholic teaching against euthanasia by refusing medical care that would have kept him alive longer — a charge immediately dismissed by Vatican officials.
In an article in the Italian journal Micromega, Dr. Lina Pavanelli, an anaesthesiologist, questioned why John Paul was only outfitted with a nasal feeding tube on March 30, 2005, three days before he died. She said he clearly was in need of artificial nutrition well before then.
John Paul was rushed to Rome’s Gemelli Polyclinic hospital two times in February 2005 with breathing crises related to his Parkinson’s disease; he was released for the last time March 13. He died in his Vatican apartment on April 2, from what the Vatican said was septic shock and cardiocirculatory collapse.
The Vatican announced March 30 that John Paul had been outfitted with a nasal feeding straw to improve his nutrition so he could recover strength.
However, Vatican officials said Wednesday that the tube had actually been inserted well before March 30 but that the procedure was only announced on that date. They disclosed the information in response to Pavanelli’s charges, which they said weren’t serious because she had no access to the medical records and based her accusations only on press releases and news reports.
At a news conference Wednesday, Pavanelli acknowledged she didn’t have access to John Paul’s medical records and acknowledged the likelihood that he may have been outfitted sooner than March 30 with a nasal feeding tube.
But she maintained her core argument that he was not given adequate nutrition soon enough, saying he actually should have been given a stomach feeding tube since he needed longer-term artificial nutrition. She says she assumes John Paul’s doctors offered him that option, but that he must have refused the treatment since he wasn’t given it.
Catholic teaching holds that it is morally wrong to refuse “proportionate” or ordinary care, which includes water and feeding tubes; refusing such care amounts to euthanasia.
“He was fed neither at the right time, nor in the right way for the correct amount of time,” Pavanelli said. That created a situation in which the pope was too weak to fend off the urinary tract infection that led to the septic shock that ultimately killed him, she charged.
In the article, Pavanelli concludes that “when the patient knowingly refuses a lifesaving therapy, his action together with the remissive or ommissive behavior of doctors, must be considered euthanasia, or more precisely, assisted suicide.”
The Vatican recently repeated its position on euthanasia and feeding tubes. A document issued Sept. 14 from the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith reaffirmed that it considers the removal of feeding tubes from people in vegetative states to be an immoral act.
The Vatican distinguishes between feeding tubes, which it considers proportionate care, and “aggressive medical treatment” which can be disproportionate to any expected results or pose an excessive burden on the patient.
“In such situations, when death is clearly imminent an inevitable, one can in conscience refuse forms of treatment that would only secure a precarious and burdensome prolongation of life, so long as the normal care due to the sick person in similar cases is not interrupted,” according to John Paul’s 1995 encyclical “Evangelium Vitae.”
Pavanelli appeared at a news conference to defend her claims alongside the widow of Piergiorgio Welby, who has been at the center of a right-to-die campaign in this predominantly Roman Catholic country.
Welby, a paralyzed writer who suffered from muscular dystrophy, died in December after a doctor carried out his wish and disconnected his respirator.



Previous Posts

Did Obama mean to pick a fight with America’s two largest denominations?
In an election year of all times, why would President Barack Obama choose to infuriate both America’s Catholics and Southern Baptists? “It seems that Obama, in a classic act of hubris, has created the means of his own destruction,” writes conservative commentator J.R. Dunn in the American T

posted 4:42:46pm Feb. 13, 2012 | read full post »

Did Rastafarian spokesman Bob Marley become a Christian on his deathbed?
Three decades after the death of legendary Jamaican musician Bob Marley, an intriguing story is circulating. “What most people don't know, and many try to cover up, is the fact that Bob Marley converted to Christianity in 1980,” proclaims an article that has appeared on a number of websites.

posted 4:52:03pm Feb. 10, 2012 | read full post »

Are U.S. colleges hostile to Christian students?
Are Christian kids on U.S. college campuses facing open hostility and discrimination because of their faith? Supreme Court Justice Justice Samuel Alito seems to think so. So does U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Daniel Ripple – and human rights attorneys Gregory Baylor and Jordan Lorenc

posted 12:18:26pm Feb. 09, 2012 | read full post »

Building a Temple to Atheism
When I say temple, you think religious place of worship right?  When I say atheist, you think one that believes there is no God.  Stay with me now, when I say religion, don’t you think about the worship of God?  Before this blog becomes a full blown say what you are thinking game, let me get to

posted 5:49:11pm Feb. 03, 2012 | read full post »

Romney Nabs Second Primary Victory in Florida
"I stand ready to lead this party and to lead our nation.  My leadership will end the Obama era and begin a new era of American prosperity," Romney said in his victory speech in Tampa Tuesday night.  Romney who won all 50 of Florida’s convention delegates is the only Republican candidate to have

posted 5:15:58pm Feb. 02, 2012 | read full post »

Advertisement
Comments read comments(5)
post a comment
nnmns

posted September 27, 2007 at 9:11 am


So, can they saint someone who committed suicide, of a sort?



report abuse
 

Henrietta22

posted September 27, 2007 at 9:33 am


The rationale for Pope John is just, my relative left pretty much as He did.
There doesn’t seem to be rationale for what I have just read about six Nuns being excommunicated from the R.C. Church in Hot Springs, AK ,however. Six Nuns, at least one in her 80′s belonged to a group called “Lady of All Nations”. It’s founder 86 yr. old Marie Paule Giguere believes she receives graces from Virgin Mary and God. Father Eric Roy, probably from Quebec, where the group is, upholds this. Rev. Hebert, diocease administrator, in AK, calls them Heratics because they refuse to recant the teachings of the “Lady of All Nations” He has claimed that the founder thinks she is the reincarnation of the Virgin Mary, she does not say that, just that she receives messages through God’s Grace.
Jesus said, I will go and then I will send you, each, the Holy Spirit to direct your path. Evidently R.C. aren’t allowed to have the guidence of the Holy Spirit unless the R.C. Church allows them to. To be ex-communicated in R.C. means you can no longer participate in Church litergy and receive communion, and other sacrements. Pretty harsh.
The Nuns will be allowed to continue living at the convent property that they own. What must it feel like to be in your 80′s and to have given your life to God’s Church, married to Christ and then to be treated in this way?



report abuse
 

jestrfyl

posted September 27, 2007 at 10:28 am


Everyone loves a good conspiracy. It’s even better with a taint of scandal. All that being said, I simply wish the Pope – who ever it is ina nay given generation – would not feel that he has to impose sitautions on other people that he would not accept in his own life. Folks in Terri Sciavo’s case – or her husbands for that matter – should not be compelled by the Pope to endure things the Pope’s own self would not. Life is more than the accumulation of days. I prefer the Old Testament phrase, “Old and full of days”. That can apply to anyone, without regard for the measurement of the chronology.



report abuse
 

pagansister

posted September 29, 2007 at 9:14 pm


In all honesty, who cares whether Paul did on didn’t refuse the treatment? It was his life to do with as he chose, and his days were numbered. Parkinson’s is a horrible way to go, my mother had it.



report abuse
 

pagansister

posted September 29, 2007 at 9:16 pm


Correction: John Paul



report abuse
 

Post a Comment

By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.

Share this story


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Help

Media Kit

Subscribe

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.