M
Melissa426
Guest
The vast majority of doctors who have evaluated her have come to the conclusion that she is in a PVS. I have heard that her brain is essentially gone, the only part that works is the part that tells her heart to keep beating and her lungs to keep breathing.Tgace said:I suppose that an issue close to the crux here is do we trust medical science enough to believe them when they say that this woman is in a "persistent vegetative state"? She apparently has some sort of brain function as reports state that she responds in some manner to stimulation (when spoken to). For all we know she could be conscious "in there" and then the prospect of starving a conscious person to death is somewhat less palatable.
For those with medical training. Is feeding all that is done to support cases like this? I would think that various medications to prevent infections, pneumonia, influenza etc. would have to be administered as well. Is just reducing care to basic life support (food/air) an option?
Her parents and family believe because she exhibits some reflexive movement, that she is responding to them and just needs therapy. She probably is getting various medications to prevent infections, etc, but that is not what is keeping her alive. Her tube feedings are. Without them, she will develop severe metabolic imbalances which will cause her heart, lungs, and kidneys to fail and that is what will cause her death.