Vatican-backed hospital proposes charter of rights for incurable children
by Michael Cook | 2 Jun 2018 |
The ten articles of the document are:
- The child and his family are entitled to the best possible relationship with doctors and health personnel
- The child and his family have the right to health education
- The child and his family have the right to obtain a second opinion
- The child and his family have the right to receive the most competent diagnosis
- The child has the right to access the best experimental treatment
- The child is entitled to cross-border health transfers
- The child has the right to continuity of care and palliative care
- The child has the right to respect his person even in the final phase of life, without therapeutic obstinacy
- The child and his family have a right to psychological and spiritual accompaniment.
- The child and his family have the right to participate in care, research and reception activities
Saturday, June 2, 2018
Some years ago, I received an unexpected phone call from a Melbourne magazine which described itself as the voice of the Australian Left. One of the editors wanted me to write an article about euthanasia activist Philip Nitschke. “He’s ****ing the proletariat over, comrade,” was his interpretation of Dr Nitschke’s mission. I obliged and was later rewarded with an invitation to the magazine’s Christmas party. I had an interesting chat there with an enthusiastic fan of Stalin’s philosophical works (“much misunderstood”), thus dispelling any misgivings I might have had about the magazine’s left-wing credentials.
Nowadays, “left-wing” almost certainly indicates support for euthanasia. That’s why I was gratified to read that the defeat of a euthanasia bill in Portugal last week was due to the opposition of the Communist Party. Its leader, João Oliveira, told the Portuguese parliament that:
Nowadays, “left-wing” almost certainly indicates support for euthanasia. That’s why I was gratified to read that the defeat of a euthanasia bill in Portugal last week was due to the opposition of the Communist Party. Its leader, João Oliveira, told the Portuguese parliament that:
“Faced with the problems of human suffering, illness, disability or incapacity, the solution is not to remove responsibility from society by promoting the early death of people in these circumstances, but to promote social progress in order to ensure conditions for a decent life.”
That’s what I thought left-wing politics was all about: protecting the disadvantaged. Have left-wingers in the Anglosphere lost their way?
Michael Cook
Editor BioEdge |
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