Normally in a hospital, if a patient doesn't drink enough for any reason, they're hydrated via IV drip. When I was being treated for cancer, whenever I came in to be hospitalized I was connected to an IV drip - even if I wasn't medicated right away; that was standard policy for all hospitalized patients.
It seems bizarre that a hospitalized patient could suicide by not drinking without the staff being complicit. That's why I thought at first that something else must have killed her; perhaps she was already very weak from the cancer or from chemotherapy, and not eating for 11 days made her weak enough to die.
It seems bizarre that a hospitalized patient could suicide by not drinking without the staff being complicit.
I'm sure they are, but I don't think the situation is that bizarre. I mean, isn't that exactly how Terry Schiavo's body died? The husband had food & water withdrawn, and the hospital staff was complicit in letting it die.
Reading http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_dehydration#Voluntary the legal basis is actually a little weird. Apparently putting in the IV drip without consent would constitute assault! And this right to refuse treatment ha...
http://www.alcor.org/blog/?p=2716
Previously on LW: Aug 18, Aug 25, Aug 27, Jan 22.