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A
rogue doctor of death in Ohio
By Melissa Martin
The airwaves are buzzing with the story about an Ohio hospital and
doctor. And deceased patients. Death by fentanyl. Incompetence or
negligence? Intentional to reduce prolonged suffering? Mercy killings?
Euthanasia is not legal in the United States.
Physician-assisted death is not legal in Ohio. However, Ohio State
Senator Charleta Tavares (D-Columbus) introduced SB 249, Ohio Aid in
Dying Act, on January 24, 2018, with co-sponsors Ohio State Senators
Joseph Schiavoni (D-33) and Kenny Yuko (D-25). If enacted, the Act will
allow qualified terminally ill, dying Ohio residents to legally obtain
medications to end their suffering at the end of life. On 3/21/18, SB
249 was referred to Committee Health, Human Services and Medicaid.
www.legislature.ohio.gov/.
“Mount Carmel recently reported to authorities the findings of an
internal investigation that determined a Mount Carmel doctor who
provided intensive care ordered significantly excessive and potentially
fatal doses of pain medication for at least 27 patients who were near
death. These patients’ families had requested that all life-saving
measures be stopped, yet the amount of medicine the doctor ordered was
more than what was needed to provide comfort,” according to information
on the Mount Carmel website. www.mountcarmelhealth.com/about-us/facts/.
According a 2019 article in the Columbus Dispatch, “The Ohio Department
of Health has begun an investigation into a Mount Carmel doctor accused
of ordering potentially fatal doses of painkiller for 27 near-death
hospital patients, all of whom have died. Mount Carmel officials fired
the doctor and placed 20 pharmacists and nurses on leave while they
look into the cases.”
“Eighteen months ago, Mount Carmel began work to stop preventable
medical errors — work that puts systems into place to make the care we
provide highly reliable and consistent,” is another statement on the
Mount Carmel website.
Why is a policy to prevent medical errors not ongoing? Why eighteen
months ago? Why not prior to opening the hospital for business? It
appears that whistle-blowing employees came forth with the allegations.
When did the intentional ending of a patient’s life by a physician
become ‘a medical error’?
Donald Harvey, a nurse’s aide, dubbed “the Angle of Death” pleaded
guilty in 1987 to killing 55 patients in Cincinnati and Kentucky
hospitals. Many of his victims were chronically ill patients. He
claimed he was ending their suffering. “Harvey told a newspaper after
he pleaded guilty to avoid the death penalty that he liked the control
of determining who lived and died. Former Hamilton County Prosecutor
Arthur Ney Jr. who prosecuted the cases in Cincinnati said Harvey was
not a mercy killer,” according to a 2017 article in USA Today.
Lisa Schattinger, a nurse, founded Ohio End of Life Options in 2015.
The members support a Death with Dignity law in Ohio. “The law allows a
mentally competent, terminally ill adult to obtain prescription
medications from his or her doctors in order to hasten his or her
imminent death.” This law exists in Oregon, Washington, Vermont,
California, Colorado, Hawaii, and Washington D.C. www.ohiooptions.org.
Dr. Jack Kevorkian, a medical pathologist, was arrested, tried in a
court of law, and convicted of physician-assisted suicide. According to
a 2011 article in the New York Times, “The American Medical Association
in 1995 called him “a reckless instrument of death” who “poses a great
threat to the public.”
The phrase ‘physician-assisted suicide’ has been replaced by ‘death
with dignity.’ Loaded language is a persuasive technique used to
heighten emotion, gain support, and sway voters. And loaded phrases are
changed to make horrific acts more palatable to the public.
Do you support or oppose a Death with Dignity law in Ohio for the
terminally ill?
Do you support or oppose the alleged acts of a rogue physician to end
the suffering of terminally ill patients by injecting lethal doses of
fentanyl at Mount Carmel hospital in Columbus, Ohio?
Melissa Martin, Ph.D., is an author, columnist, educator, and
therapist. She lives in Southern Ohio.
www.melissamartinchildrensauthor.com.
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