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There's a brain-dead corpse whose family is being forced (Original Post) malaise Jan 2014 OP
Does insurance cover health care costs for dead people? peace13 Jan 2014 #1
The woman is dead. The fetus apparently isn't. LisaL Jan 2014 #4
They do not know if the fetus is any more alive than the woman. uppityperson Jan 2014 #13
If it isn't alive, then there is nobody to support on life support. LisaL Jan 2014 #17
And that is the problem. They didn't unplug anyone from mechanical support. uppityperson Jan 2014 #20
They don't know if the fetus is alive or not. jeff47 Jan 2014 #27
You never heard of women whose fetus died in utero? LisaL Jan 2014 #46
No, at the moment they do not know if the fetus is alive or not. jeff47 Jan 2014 #58
It's at 21 weeks gestation. LisaL Jan 2014 #66
Their mothers were not dead. They were not deprived of oxygen for an hour. (nt) jeff47 Jan 2014 #70
Micropreemies are likely to be severely damaged due to brain bleeds and the like Hekate Jan 2014 #72
21 weeks now...it was only 14 weeks when this travesty of human rights began.... Drew Richards Jan 2014 #92
Those few that survive are devastatingly disabled. ALWAYS. kestrel91316 Jan 2014 #98
Thanks Kestrel, but that particular poster has an agenda and is not listening. Hekate Jan 2014 #106
that poster wanted to keep Terri Schiavo on life support too. CreekDog Jan 2014 #164
Apparently, there are enlightenment Jan 2014 #144
But nobody wants this particular fetus to be removed at 21 weeks. LisaL Jan 2014 #153
Why do you continue saying fetus is alive? Proof of that? And is it ethical to go against what uppityperson Jan 2014 #154
There is no proof its dead. LisaL Jan 2014 #157
There is no proof it is alive. Is it ethical to keep mechanical support on someone against their and uppityperson Jan 2014 #158
This message was self-deleted by its author CreekDog Jan 2014 #162
Well, well. That is indeed relevant. Hekate Jan 2014 #170
LisaL, enlightenment Jan 2014 #159
Not ones who were deprived of oxygen for well over an hour at 14 weeks. pnwmom Jan 2014 #137
Nonsense. A fetal heartbeat can be detected long before 21 weeks. WillowTree Jan 2014 #103
Fetal heartbeats can be detected in fetuses that fail to develop a brain at all. jeff47 Jan 2014 #111
If it doesn't have a brain, then it's not going to live. LisaL Jan 2014 #112
Nope. Which is why you can't use a heartbeat to prove the fetus is alive. jeff47 Jan 2014 #116
Nothing to suggest this woman was thinking about abortion. LisaL Jan 2014 #120
Except she did discuss when to "pull the plug" with her husband. jeff47 Jan 2014 #129
the very, very long list of men's rights posts you've compiled makes it not surprising CreekDog Jan 2014 #165
"Tests are done daily on the fetus, and results show a normal heart beat." hedgehog Jan 2014 #62
With a fetus, a heartbeat doesn't necessarily mean it's alive. jeff47 Jan 2014 #63
Well it sure doesn't mean it's dead. LisaL Jan 2014 #68
Because we should demand families pay jeff47 Jan 2014 #69
Yes or no? Is it ethical to force her to stay on mechanical support even though she and her family uppityperson Jan 2014 #82
Tests? Tests? Again there are not tests at 14 weeks and still none at 21 weeks...IT was deprived Drew Richards Jan 2014 #95
You state that there is no possibility of the fetus becoming a healthy child, hedgehog Jan 2014 #104
That is a strawman no starter...the fetus was only 14 weeks when this started and the plug Drew Richards Jan 2014 #107
24 weeks isn't a magic number in TX. LisaL Jan 2014 #119
I just finished reading the 2013 Texas abortion law before posting...abortion in Texas is LEGAL up Drew Richards Jan 2014 #126
I am afraid you are not up to date on TX abortion law. LisaL Jan 2014 #127
I see you are correct the supremes decided not to recind in a 5 4 decision...but again what Drew Richards Jan 2014 #139
When the husband found the woman, she had already turned blue. Her own father pnwmom Jan 2014 #136
The father of the woman said the oxygen deprivation was "well over" an hour. pnwmom Jan 2014 #135
The mother has a normal heart beat, too, and she's definitely dead. pnwmom Jan 2014 #133
If the fetus is dead then the woman can be unplugged. LisaL Jan 2014 #149
Is it ethical to force life support on someone who has said, whose family says, no? uppityperson Jan 2014 #151
The woman can and should be unplugged because SHE is dead. pnwmom Jan 2014 #155
The mother has a normal heart beat, too, and she's definitely dead. pnwmom Jan 2014 #132
The fetus isn't insured. jeff47 Jan 2014 #22
But using that logic, if she was 9 months pregnant but brain dead, insurance can refuse LisaL Jan 2014 #32
Yep, it can. jeff47 Jan 2014 #34
Well isn't it great. LisaL Jan 2014 #35
Realistically, the hospital would probably avoid billing for the c-section jeff47 Jan 2014 #36
I would think hospital would bill the insurance and insurance would have to pay to avoid the LisaL Jan 2014 #52
Insurance companies regularly kill people. I don't think they'd care. (nt) jeff47 Jan 2014 #53
Thats not how it works most of the time but yes they can refuse...insurance companies make Drew Richards Jan 2014 #99
I tried to add my son to my health insurance b4 he was born MissMillie Jan 2014 #30
The fetus is not a legal person -- a "life in being." The Stranger Jan 2014 #168
Nope. And she was declared dead, according to the lawsuit. n/t pnwmom Jan 2014 #130
I've been watching this and pretty much horrified. polly7 Jan 2014 #2
That's a logical question n/t malaise Jan 2014 #8
The uh, uh, ...let's call them people*... doing the forcing should pay. Solly Mack Jan 2014 #3
I know of a number of cases where families did want pregnancy to continue. LisaL Jan 2014 #5
Brain-dead is dead malaise Jan 2014 #7
The mother is dead. The fetus isn't. LisaL Jan 2014 #9
That's the families' business malaise Jan 2014 #10
If brain dead is dead, how is it the family's business? LisaL Jan 2014 #12
Is it ethical to keep her on mechanical support? She and her family said they didn't want it. Is it uppityperson Jan 2014 #40
Yes or no? Is it ethical to force her to stay on mechanical support even though she and her family uppityperson Jan 2014 #55
Did you miss this question? I know it can be confusing to keep the discussions straight. uppityperson Jan 2014 #59
If the family wishes to uphold her wishes, it is the family's business. wtf? uppityperson Jan 2014 #60
Are you really this dense or are you just baiting people to get your jolly's off. Drew Richards Jan 2014 #100
Hard to tell, isn't it? She's everywhere and incredibly persistent. nt Hekate Jan 2014 #105
Everywhere? And that's concerns you how? LisaL Jan 2014 #113
Try answering the points I made in #76--or anybody else's. Skip the canned speech; we've seen it... Hekate Jan 2014 #160
Persistent in never answering a question. uppityperson Jan 2014 #123
Why do you say the fetus isn't in the same state as the woman? Heart beats in both. uppityperson Jan 2014 #15
Did anybody verify that fetus is brain dead? No. LisaL Jan 2014 #18
Did anyone verify that the fetus has a functioning brain? No. Does anyone beyond you think uppityperson Jan 2014 #24
I have no clue what kind of health issues the fetus suffered (if any). LisaL Jan 2014 #33
Yet you claim "The fetus isn't" braindead. Since you have no clue, how can you claim that? uppityperson Jan 2014 #39
I said it isn't dead. LisaL Jan 2014 #42
What do you base "it doesn't appear to be dead" on? uppityperson Jan 2014 #45
It has a normal heart beat. LisaL Jan 2014 #48
You mean like the woman has a normal heart beat? uppityperson Jan 2014 #49
What evidence do you have this fetus isn't alive? LisaL Jan 2014 #51
You mean like the woman has a normal heart beat? uppityperson Jan 2014 #54
No we shouldn't. LisaL Jan 2014 #56
Should be assume all fetuses with a heartbeat are alive? uppityperson Jan 2014 #57
The fetus was at 21 (update: 14) weeks when the mother died... ljm2002 Jan 2014 #84
Actually, it was only 14 weeks. PeaceNikki Jan 2014 #87
Thank you for the correction... ljm2002 Jan 2014 #90
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ uppityperson Jan 2014 #97
++++++++++ Starry Messenger Jan 2014 #109
they were pulling the same stuff with Terry Schiavo CreekDog Jan 2014 #167
I did say the people doing the forcing, yes? And unless the dead woman doing the incubating agreed Solly Mack Jan 2014 #11
Family should pay? LisaL Jan 2014 #14
Damn. I didn't realize I'd have to run through bullshit today. Solly Mack Jan 2014 #21
Sorry. I guess you are just too smart for me. LisaL Jan 2014 #23
No one offers health insurance to fetuses. jeff47 Jan 2014 #25
Let me guess rbixby Jan 2014 #28
No idea. jeff47 Jan 2014 #31
But this is not one of them. n/t ljm2002 Jan 2014 #81
Duh who you think Drew Richards Jan 2014 #93
Never have I seen such a violation of a family's rights malaise Jan 2014 #6
Seriously. uppityperson Jan 2014 #16
Should the fetus come out impaired, I'm sure all those well intentioned *people Solly Mack Jan 2014 #19
All the while voting to shred the safety net for the disabled & impoverished among us. CrispyQ Jan 2014 #26
Exactly! But they'll count that forced birth as a 'moral' (coughcough) victory. Solly Mack Jan 2014 #29
and then walk away as the Dad is forced to care for an impaired child for life SoCalDem Jan 2014 #75
Yep. Solly Mack Jan 2014 #78
I wonder who is doing the forcing KT2000 Jan 2014 #71
The hospital claims it is only following the law and if that is the case Solly Mack Jan 2014 #73
That should be my relative malaise Jan 2014 #83
Downright morbid. Solly Mack Jan 2014 #86
I'm going to be sick KT2000 Jan 2014 #88
You're welcome. Solly Mack Jan 2014 #91
All this will be a walk in the park - if the fetus becomes viable but on being born is srican69 Jan 2014 #37
"brain-dead" is just as dead as "cardiac dead." just sayin'... magical thyme Jan 2014 #38
Cardiac dead wouldn't be able to "incubate" a fetus. LisaL Jan 2014 #43
This message was self-deleted by its author jeff47 Jan 2014 #64
Legally they are both dead. brain dead only can incubate a fetus with mechanical and other support. magical thyme Jan 2014 #65
Using that logic, it's perfectly fine to turn off life support from a full term pregnant woman. LisaL Jan 2014 #67
um... a full term baby can be removed and survive. viability is an important point in this. PeaceNikki Jan 2014 #74
Nonsense. What is your motivation in this continuing argument? Life begins at conception? Hekate Jan 2014 #76
Thank you and I am sorry. PeaceNikki Jan 2014 #77
This message was self-deleted by its author LisaL Jan 2014 #122
Whoosh. I am thinking you are a one handed typist. eom uppityperson Jan 2014 #124
The decision should always be made by the family, not the hospital. liberal_at_heart Jan 2014 #85
If the person is brain dead, the laws say hospital has a right to turn off life support. LisaL Jan 2014 #141
Is that ethical? uppityperson Jan 2014 #146
With a full term pregnant woman, or even a woman at 24 weeks, a baby can be delivered pnwmom Jan 2014 #134
It can be, but why? LisaL Jan 2014 #140
I don't think they should bother removing the fetus from the body. pnwmom Jan 2014 #156
then why are you proposing doing that? CreekDog Jan 2014 #166
Legally, I'm pretty confident you are WAY off TroglodyteScholar Jan 2014 #94
They just issued one for Jahi McMath. LisaL Jan 2014 #118
"the" medical facility? She's not in a hospital. uppityperson Jan 2014 #125
And? I don't know where she is, but she is somewhere attached to life support. LisaL Jan 2014 #128
" can't recall any stories of a Death Certificate being issued for someone who's still in the... uppityperson Jan 2014 #131
It was issued when she was still at the hospital. LisaL Jan 2014 #138
They didn't "just issue it". She HAS been moved. And, to be fair, lots of death certs are issued uppityperson Jan 2014 #142
She was still at the hospital when death certificate was issued. LisaL Jan 2014 #147
Exactly. They did "just issue it" like you wrote. Is it ethical to keep someone on mechanical suppor uppityperson Jan 2014 #148
Is it ethical to force life support on someone who has said, whose family says, no? uppityperson Jan 2014 #143
More than that malaise Jan 2014 #163
Wot? Wait you never heard of anyone signing a death certificate to have someone pop awake on Drew Richards Jan 2014 #121
Actually many death certs are issued to people who die in hospitals. uppityperson Jan 2014 #145
It's a sad situation. herding cats Jan 2014 #41
I thought the hospital was going to check the fetus this week? ryan_cats Jan 2014 #44
Yes, they were planning to do tests soon. LisaL Jan 2014 #47
Back in December, a local publication Cerridwen Jan 2014 #50
WAIT...I GOT AN IDEA. IF they wont declare her dead then technically shes alive and a patient Drew Richards Jan 2014 #108
Family argues a legally dead person is not a "patient", therefore statute does not apply stg81 Jan 2014 #61
And they are correct malaise Jan 2014 #89
A corpse incubating a fetus HockeyMom Jan 2014 #79
In US they can not. LisaL Jan 2014 #117
Not only that... ljm2002 Jan 2014 #80
The very second that child is delivered, the husband needs to file a wrongful birth lawsuit kestrel91316 Jan 2014 #96
I agree with you, but who would the defendant be? jmowreader Jan 2014 #110
The hospital. And the state of Texass. kestrel91316 Jan 2014 #152
Please stop with the dehumanizing language. Th1onein Jan 2014 #101
Her family insist that she is dead n/t malaise Jan 2014 #102
Yes, but I doubt her family is calling her a corpse. Th1onein Jan 2014 #115
Fact - every dead person is a corpse malaise Jan 2014 #161
No one is denying that fact. But when you're talking about a family member's loved one.... Th1onein Jan 2014 #169
Her family says she's dead. jeff47 Jan 2014 #114
She became "dehumanized" when she died. Barack_America Jan 2014 #150
 

peace13

(11,076 posts)
1. Does insurance cover health care costs for dead people?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:29 PM
Jan 2014

This is gonna get real messy. This case is one of the saddest things! The poor woman missed out on such much and now they are dragging her through hell on earth!

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
17. If it isn't alive, then there is nobody to support on life support.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:45 PM
Jan 2014

Hospital would have unplugged the woman a long time ago.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
27. They don't know if the fetus is alive or not.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:03 PM
Jan 2014

They can not tell one way or the other.

The hospital decided this means they get to overrule the family and keep the corpse's blood flowing.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
46. You never heard of women whose fetus died in utero?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:49 PM
Jan 2014

At the moment the fetus at the very least appears to be alive.
They can do tests on it to see how it's developing. They might not be able to tell how intelligent its going to be, but at least they should be able to tell if it has a brain.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
58. No, at the moment they do not know if the fetus is alive or not.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:39 PM
Jan 2014
They can do tests on it to see how it's developing.

Nope. It's too small for such tests. So they have no idea if it's currently alive.

What the hospital is doing is keeping the woman's corpse functional so that the fetus could get large enough to run those tests, if it survived.

But hey, what are a woman's wishes and her family's wishes compared to a fetus that is most likely dead.

Hekate

(90,498 posts)
72. Micropreemies are likely to be severely damaged due to brain bleeds and the like
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 06:52 PM
Jan 2014

At five and a quarter months they are not ready to be out of the womb in any sense of the word. Keeping the corpse of the mother artificially breathing when the fetus was still only a couple of inches long was a grotesque idea in the first place. It does not get any less grotesque with the passage of time.

"There are a few cases of" -- you keep saying this, over and over. "There are a few cases of" brain-dead women giving birth. "There are a few cases of" micropreemies who survive. Having a severely damaged baby "survive" is not the miracle you are looking for. And then there's the conflation of comatose and brain-dead that you seem to make: it is not the same condition.

As for fetal heartbeats: anencephalic babies have heartbeats too, right up to the point where they are delivered, at which point they die fairly quickly.

Texas legislators enacted a law having to do with a religious fantasy, that compels doctors and nurses to engage in science fiction incubation. What's your motiveation?

 

kestrel91316

(51,666 posts)
98. Those few that survive are devastatingly disabled. ALWAYS.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 08:29 PM
Jan 2014

Birth before 7 months is almost always a horrible catastrophe FOR THE CHILD.

Hekate

(90,498 posts)
106. Thanks Kestrel, but that particular poster has an agenda and is not listening.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 10:14 PM
Jan 2014

On some level, she must be really enjoying the attention.

enlightenment

(8,830 posts)
144. Apparently, there are
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:08 AM
Jan 2014

two surviving not quite 22 week premmies - one born in the 1980s and the other in 2006. Both are apparently healthy - but their mothers were also healthy - a very big difference from this situation.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
153. But nobody wants this particular fetus to be removed at 21 weeks.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:34 AM
Jan 2014

Father is suing to have the hospital to pull the plug on his brain dead wife. If plug is pulled fetus will die at that time.
Hospital plans on continuing keeping her on life support until such time the fetus becomes viable.
So there are no plans by anyone to remove it now at 21 weeks.

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
154. Why do you continue saying fetus is alive? Proof of that? And is it ethical to go against what
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:36 AM
Jan 2014

the woman and her husband and family want? Is it ethical to keep the body on mechanical support when she said not to and he says not to?

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
157. There is no proof its dead.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:45 AM
Jan 2014

If it wasn't alive hospital wouldn't need to keep the mother's body on life support.
The whole reason they (the hospital) not pulling the plug is because of the fetus.
What would be the point of keeping the body on life support if the fetus was also dead?

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
158. There is no proof it is alive. Is it ethical to keep mechanical support on someone against their and
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:52 AM
Jan 2014

their family's wishes?

Response to LisaL (Reply #157)

enlightenment

(8,830 posts)
159. LisaL,
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 01:11 AM
Jan 2014

Let me be clear, so there is no confusion. I do not agree with your position. I do not believe that the potential - and I emphasize potential - life of the fetus trumps the right of the mother, who did not want extraordinary measures taken to maintain her life. I was simply pointing out that there have been two cases of 21-week premmies surviving without severe issues.

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
137. Not ones who were deprived of oxygen for well over an hour at 14 weeks.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:00 AM
Jan 2014

I've never seen a case like this one, and neither have you.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
111. Fetal heartbeats can be detected in fetuses that fail to develop a brain at all.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 10:50 PM
Jan 2014

A heartbeat is not proof that the fetus is actually alive.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
116. Nope. Which is why you can't use a heartbeat to prove the fetus is alive.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:29 PM
Jan 2014

But more to the point, at 14 weeks a woman is free to abort her baby for any reason. None of this bullshit about "viable".

Instead, pro-lifers believe women are just incubators, so being dead isn't an impediment to fulfilling their only purpose. And we get horrific abominations like this case.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
129. Except she did discuss when to "pull the plug" with her husband.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:50 PM
Jan 2014

And pulling the plug now easily fits into her wishes.

More to the point, you are presuming that you know her wishes better than her husband and all the rest of her family. They're all outraged at this situation.

And that is an utterly terrible thing for you to do. Even when you think women are just walking incubators.

CreekDog

(46,192 posts)
165. the very, very long list of men's rights posts you've compiled makes it not surprising
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 07:15 PM
Jan 2014

that you so quickly dismiss any concern for the rights of the woman in this case.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
63. With a fetus, a heartbeat doesn't necessarily mean it's alive.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 06:01 PM
Jan 2014

For example when a fetus fails to develop a brain, it's heart still beats.

This fetus could have nothing left in it's not-yet-developed skull, but still have a heartbeat.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
69. Because we should demand families pay
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 06:41 PM
Jan 2014

$5,000 per day for a hospital to act against their wishes, and the wishes of their now-dead loved one.

Because there's only an almost-zero chance that a fetus is viable, instead of a completely-zero chance.

Because freedom.

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
82. Yes or no? Is it ethical to force her to stay on mechanical support even though she and her family
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:30 PM
Jan 2014

do not want it?

Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
95. Tests? Tests? Again there are not tests at 14 weeks and still none at 21 weeks...IT was deprived
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 08:22 PM
Jan 2014

Of oxygen for possibly up to an hour...chances are there is NOTHING VIABLE LEFT...its just a rudimentary nervous system with a Micro heart... And partial skeletal structure... a piece of meat and the FAMILIES DECISION should trump ANYONEs on a fetus only 14 weeks gestating.

hedgehog

(36,286 posts)
104. You state that there is no possibility of the fetus becoming a healthy child,
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 10:11 PM
Jan 2014

and tie this with your statement that the family's wishes should be honored. What would you say if it was proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that a healthy child would be born if the mother's body is kept on life support another two months?

Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
107. That is a strawman no starter...the fetus was only 14 weeks when this started and the plug
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 10:22 PM
Jan 2014

Should have been pulled...so my answer to you is what the fuck does two more weeks have to do with this woman, her corpse, and the families decision and rights, have to do with anything.

If I get your view of things the fetus has more rights and in loco prentis the hospital and the state MORE than this poor woman, her corpse or her husband....sick. Im gonna be sick.

Oh Oh I see you want it to get to the magic voodoo 24 weeks so that it then cannot be legally aborted in Texas...great great....blech.

Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
126. I just finished reading the 2013 Texas abortion law before posting...abortion in Texas is LEGAL up
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:43 PM
Jan 2014

to 24 weeks.

Show me I'm wrong go pull up the law as I did...

But never mind this is just a side track by you on the fact that, the patient had rights, the family had rights and that greasy mass of cells dont have rights that supersedes theirs...at least not in normal sane land...maybe in bat shit crazy land but not in the rest of the known sane parts of the world.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
127. I am afraid you are not up to date on TX abortion law.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:46 PM
Jan 2014

"A new Texas law will continue prohibiting abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy even as the U.S. Supreme Court allowed a similar Arizona law to be overturned."

http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/texas-abortion-ban-unaffected-by-supreme-court-shut-down-of-similar-arizona-law.html/

Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
139. I see you are correct the supremes decided not to recind in a 5 4 decision...but again what
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:02 AM
Jan 2014

Does this matter except they now have a case to fight not to allow an abotion in this case...

I dont know if you are playing devils advocate or are seriously deficient...and dont give a shit about the woman her body and the families right to decide or are you perhaps part of that death cult that call themselves right to lifers?t

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
136. When the husband found the woman, she had already turned blue. Her own father
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:58 PM
Jan 2014

said the doctors told him that she had been without oxygen for well over an hour.

So your example has nothing to do with this case. A healthy child cannot be born under these circumstances.

But, to answer your question, I think just as a woman has the right to choose, her family should have the right to make this decision -- not the hospital or the state.

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
133. The mother has a normal heart beat, too, and she's definitely dead.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:53 PM
Jan 2014

The fetus is either massively damaged from more than an hour without oxygen, or dead.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
149. If the fetus is dead then the woman can be unplugged.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:14 AM
Jan 2014

So far the hospital hasn't said anything about fetus being dead.

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
155. The woman can and should be unplugged because SHE is dead.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:41 AM
Jan 2014

It should be up to the family and the family alone whether the corpse is used in a medical experiment to see what happens when a fetus that has been oxygen deprived for more than an hour, then subject to electroshocks and drugs, is maintained in a corpse for months.

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
132. The mother has a normal heart beat, too, and she's definitely dead.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:52 PM
Jan 2014

The ventilator that's keeping her oxygen circulating is probably the reason for the fetal heartbeat as well.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
22. The fetus isn't insured.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:57 PM
Jan 2014

The woman was. And all her prenatal health care (and thus the fetus's health care) was billed to her.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
32. But using that logic, if she was 9 months pregnant but brain dead, insurance can refuse
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:08 PM
Jan 2014

to pay for a c-section. Even if the fetus was perfectly heatlhy.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
36. Realistically, the hospital would probably avoid billing for the c-section
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:17 PM
Jan 2014

in order to avoid the massively horrific publicity.

Since the mother is dead, there wouldn't be much cost - don't have to worry about anesthetic, blood loss, infection, and so on.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
52. I would think hospital would bill the insurance and insurance would have to pay to avoid the
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:05 PM
Jan 2014

horrific publicity.

Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
99. Thats not how it works most of the time but yes they can refuse...insurance companies make
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 08:29 PM
Jan 2014

A determination on the viability of the fetus and take the families preference in their decision normally...

If its viable and near term insurance will cove the csection under the deceased policy as long as that policy does NOT lapse between the time of decision and time of csection....

MissMillie

(38,522 posts)
30. I tried to add my son to my health insurance b4 he was born
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:07 PM
Jan 2014

The insurance company wouldn't let me.

The Stranger

(11,297 posts)
168. The fetus is not a legal person -- a "life in being."
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 07:28 PM
Jan 2014

So he/she/it cannot have insurance, hold insurance, or be insured.

polly7

(20,582 posts)
2. I've been watching this and pretty much horrified.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:31 PM
Jan 2014

Besides the obvious craziness of it all, how impaired might that fetus be if she had gone without breathing for any length of time before being found ... I read somewhere it could have been for up to an hour before her husband woke? I can't even imagine the agony her family is going through. Just awful.

Solly Mack

(90,758 posts)
3. The uh, uh, ...let's call them people*... doing the forcing should pay.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:32 PM
Jan 2014

(*because I know no one wants to know that I have a more favorable opinion of the cheese-like substance inside a sebaceous cyst than I do those who would force a dead body to incubate a fetus)

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
5. I know of a number of cases where families did want pregnancy to continue.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:34 PM
Jan 2014

So it's not always a "forced" situation. Who should pay if family does want pregnancy to continue?

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
9. The mother is dead. The fetus isn't.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:40 PM
Jan 2014

So fetus should be ignored even in cases where family wants pregnancy to continue?

malaise

(268,594 posts)
10. That's the families' business
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:42 PM
Jan 2014

You seriously think a 12 week fetus that went without oxygen for a long time is viable.
Please spare me.

Take her off the machine - that is her family's wish.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
12. If brain dead is dead, how is it the family's business?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:43 PM
Jan 2014

Using that logic, even if woman is near full term but brain dead, hospital would have a right to turn off life support.
Regardless of what family wants.

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
40. Is it ethical to keep her on mechanical support? She and her family said they didn't want it. Is it
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:22 PM
Jan 2014

ethical to do that?

Don't turn it around to "is it ethical to take her off". Simply answer this easy question. Is it ethical to force her to stay on mechanical support even though she and her family do not want it?

Yes?
No?

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
55. Yes or no? Is it ethical to force her to stay on mechanical support even though she and her family
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:21 PM
Jan 2014

do not want it?

Yes?
No?

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
60. If the family wishes to uphold her wishes, it is the family's business. wtf?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:55 PM
Jan 2014

That is the issue here. Is it ethical to disregard the family's wishes?

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
113. Everywhere? And that's concerns you how?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:26 PM
Jan 2014

Are you going to tell me what I can and can not post?

Hekate

(90,498 posts)
160. Try answering the points I made in #76--or anybody else's. Skip the canned speech; we've seen it...
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 02:04 AM
Jan 2014

You only have one thing to say, and facts are not getting through.

But you carry on -- it's a free country.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
18. Did anybody verify that fetus is brain dead? No.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:46 PM
Jan 2014

To establish brain death, specific tests need to be done.

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
24. Did anyone verify that the fetus has a functioning brain? No. Does anyone beyond you think
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:57 PM
Jan 2014

the fetus did not suffer health issues as the woman did? No.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
33. I have no clue what kind of health issues the fetus suffered (if any).
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:10 PM
Jan 2014

Neither does anyone else at this time.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
42. I said it isn't dead.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:46 PM
Jan 2014

Or at least doesn't appear to be dead.
Obviously tests can be run to see if its brain appears to be normal.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
51. What evidence do you have this fetus isn't alive?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:56 PM
Jan 2014

Normally when fetus has a heart beat its assumed to be alive.
Should we assume all fetuses are dead even if they have a heart beat?

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
54. You mean like the woman has a normal heart beat?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:20 PM
Jan 2014

Normally when woman has a heart beat shes assumed to be alive.
Should we assume all women are dead even if they have a heart beat?

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
57. Should be assume all fetuses with a heartbeat are alive?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:27 PM
Jan 2014

"Normally when fetus has a heart beat its assumed to be alive."

Normally when woman has a heart beat she is assumed to be alive.

ljm2002

(10,751 posts)
84. The fetus was at 21 (update: 14) weeks when the mother died...
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:32 PM
Jan 2014

...which is within the legal allowed time for an abortion. Therefore, there is no reason her dead body should be used as an incubator against the family's wishes. The family wished the pregnancy to be terminated along with their beloved family member's life. What possible legal basis can there be for the hospital to go against their wishes?

IOW: there is NO need for ANYONE to prove that a fetus is brain dead before they can have an abortion (within whatever time constraints are in place, typically 24 weeks or before). Therefore there is NO need for ANYONE to prove that this fetus is brain dead in order to terminate the pregnancy and allow the woman's body to be laid to rest.

There is really no excuse for this and I am appalled to see someone on DU defending it.

PeaceNikki

(27,985 posts)
87. Actually, it was only 14 weeks.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:42 PM
Jan 2014


"In the Texas case, 33-year-old Marlise Munoz was 14 weeks pregnant when her husband found her unconscious and administered CPR before calling 911. It remains unclear what happened to her, but the family suspects she suffered a blood clot in one of her lungs."

http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-pregnant-brain-dead-woman-20140114,0,3663042.story#ixzz2qVujkcCv

CreekDog

(46,192 posts)
167. they were pulling the same stuff with Terry Schiavo
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 07:27 PM
Jan 2014

and post men's rights nonsense almost continually here at DU.

i don't know what their agenda is, but i know that their agenda isn't ours.

Solly Mack

(90,758 posts)
11. I did say the people doing the forcing, yes? And unless the dead woman doing the incubating agreed
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:42 PM
Jan 2014

and that can be proven - then it is always being forced by someone. There's a difference between being forced (what I was addressing) and the family (which would have to include the wishes of the woman or it isn't a family choice) choosing it (your contribution).


So, by obvious extension, if the family, and by family one hopes people also include the woman, agree that in such an event to continue the fetal development, then the family should pay.

Solly Mack

(90,758 posts)
21. Damn. I didn't realize I'd have to run through bullshit today.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:54 PM
Jan 2014

Let me go get my waders.


Whatever ax you have to grind, I'm not a whetstone.

Whatever need you have for playing(?) at being obtuse isn't a need I have to fill.

Play your silly game elsewhere....and it has to be a game or you wouldn't be making such inane responses.





Solly Mack

(90,758 posts)
19. Should the fetus come out impaired, I'm sure all those well intentioned *people
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 03:49 PM
Jan 2014

will call it God's will.

CrispyQ

(36,411 posts)
26. All the while voting to shred the safety net for the disabled & impoverished among us.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:02 PM
Jan 2014

Maybe it's always been mean & hateful, but it didn't seem that way when I was younger.

SoCalDem

(103,856 posts)
75. and then walk away as the Dad is forced to care for an impaired child for life
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:08 PM
Jan 2014

or refuse to, and be shamed as as uncaring person.

It's a terrible thing that happened, and everyone probably thinks they are doing the proper thing, but the young father is the one who will ultimately be the loser if the baby is impaired...and of course the financial costs will be extreme

KT2000

(20,566 posts)
71. I wonder who is doing the forcing
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 06:49 PM
Jan 2014

the husband does not want this. The hospital is forcing it but that is based on their interpretation of the law. Who is advising them on that interpretation and what connections to they have to the anti-abortion groups the started this law in the first place.

This is nothing more than human experimentation without consent. That in itself is a crime.

Solly Mack

(90,758 posts)
73. The hospital claims it is only following the law and if that is the case
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:00 PM
Jan 2014

then the state is doing the forcing.

I also wondered about who sits on the hospital board and is giving advice.

I know of this man. Read it about him on DU. (IIRC)

http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2014/01/10/hospital-in-marlise-munoz-case-represented-by-anti-choice-lawyer-family-to-sue/

http://www.star-telegram.com/2014/01/09/5474256/marlise-munoz-and-the-politics.html

malaise

(268,594 posts)
83. That should be my relative
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:32 PM
Jan 2014

IT is beyond crazy - and these criminal ReTHUG RW morons talk about the privacy and their rights.

Fugg em!

KT2000

(20,566 posts)
88. I'm going to be sick
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:43 PM
Jan 2014

Thank you for the information.
This is politics then.
If this is not definitely grotesque to those "upholding the law," and they end up with a viable baby with tolerable health issues, this is just the beginning. I can imagine the day that dead women will be put on life support to incubate babies for the infertile. There's money to be made and sicko ant-iabortion folks to make happy!!

srican69

(1,426 posts)
37. All this will be a walk in the park - if the fetus becomes viable but on being born is
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:17 PM
Jan 2014

severely brain damaged and has to live like a vegetable for the next 70 years ...


who pays for that ???

 

magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
38. "brain-dead" is just as dead as "cardiac dead." just sayin'...
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:18 PM
Jan 2014

and insurance companies don't pay for "treatment" of dead people. So don't expect they'll be paying.

Response to LisaL (Reply #43)

 

magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
65. Legally they are both dead. brain dead only can incubate a fetus with mechanical and other support.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 06:26 PM
Jan 2014

Take away the mechanical and outside support, and the body is dead along with the person.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
67. Using that logic, it's perfectly fine to turn off life support from a full term pregnant woman.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 06:35 PM
Jan 2014

If she is brain dead, even if fetus is perfectly normal.

PeaceNikki

(27,985 posts)
74. um... a full term baby can be removed and survive. viability is an important point in this.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:05 PM
Jan 2014

i thought that was obvious.

Hekate

(90,498 posts)
76. Nonsense. What is your motivation in this continuing argument? Life begins at conception?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:09 PM
Jan 2014

Any termination is too early? No termination ever? Any tiny heartbeat must be considered "viable"? Should women be checked for pregnancy every month?

When conception takes place, of course there is life happening: cells are dividing. But it's not a baby and won't be for a long, long time. Are you aware that up to 20% of known pregnancies are miscarried, but that the number is probably much higher because so many occur very early? If this is all God's Will, let me know; it sure does seem to be Mother Nature's way.

Where exactly are you going with this? You willfully choose to misunderstand, despite repeated explanations, what "dead" means. I've seen dead, from my aged mother, who was ready to go, to my 6 month old granddaughter who died of SIDS. Neither one of them deserved to be hooked up to a respirator for however long it took for the last cell to decay and for general rot to set in (which is what Jahi's doctors mean by "deteriorate&quot . I've seen dead. Have you?

PeaceNikki

(27,985 posts)
77. Thank you and I am sorry.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:12 PM
Jan 2014

I'm so sorry for your losses and thank you for making important points. Can you imagine the horror that this family goes through every hour of every day?

It must be a nightmare to watch someone you love treated that way.

Response to Hekate (Reply #76)

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
141. If the person is brain dead, the laws say hospital has a right to turn off life support.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:05 AM
Jan 2014

Without permission from the family.
Dead is dead, after all.

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
134. With a full term pregnant woman, or even a woman at 24 weeks, a baby can be delivered
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:55 PM
Jan 2014

by c-section. There is no reason to turn her corpse into an incubator.

It's not the same.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
140. It can be, but why?
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:03 AM
Jan 2014

After all if the woman is legally dead she isn't a patient.
Why bother, then, removing an infant from a dead body?

pnwmom

(108,950 posts)
156. I don't think they should bother removing the fetus from the body.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:44 AM
Jan 2014

I think they should unplug the woman's corpse, intact, and turn the dead body and dead fetus over to the family to dispose of.

TroglodyteScholar

(5,477 posts)
94. Legally, I'm pretty confident you are WAY off
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 08:18 PM
Jan 2014

Last edited Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:59 AM - Edit history (1)

I can't recall any stories of a Death Certificate being issued for someone who's still in the hospital....

Edit: I should know better than to use ambiguous wording in this kind of thread--my bad.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
118. They just issued one for Jahi McMath.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:31 PM
Jan 2014

Even though she is in the medical facility somewhere attached to life support.

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
131. " can't recall any stories of a Death Certificate being issued for someone who's still in the...
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:52 PM
Jan 2014

hospital"

You said they did, for Jahi McMath. But she isn't in a hospital.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
138. It was issued when she was still at the hospital.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:02 AM
Jan 2014

She hasn't been moved yet when death certificate was issued.
It has December 12 as her date of death.

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
142. They didn't "just issue it". She HAS been moved. And, to be fair, lots of death certs are issued
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:06 AM
Jan 2014

to people in hospitals after they die.

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
147. She was still at the hospital when death certificate was issued.
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:11 AM
Jan 2014

"The Alameda County Coroner issued a death certificate Friday for Jahi McMath, a 13 year old teen left brain dead after a tonsillectomy on December 9th, despite the family’s efforts to keep her on a ventilator and move her to a care facility out of state."

http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2014/01/03/death-certificate-issued-for-jahi-mcmath-even-as-doctor-lined-up-to-insert-breathing-feeding-tubes/

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
148. Exactly. They did "just issue it" like you wrote. Is it ethical to keep someone on mechanical suppor
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:13 AM
Jan 2014

support even though they said they didn't want to, and the family says to not do so?

Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
121. Wot? Wait you never heard of anyone signing a death certificate to have someone pop awake on
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:36 PM
Jan 2014

The morgue table? I think I have heard of a few. Just messing with ya

herding cats

(19,558 posts)
41. It's a sad situation.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:35 PM
Jan 2014

There is no provision in the Texas law to cover the cost. Which means the estimated cost of $5000 a day for life support (probably more in this case since the person is clinically dead) is assumed to be the responsibility of the family. The question has been asked by reporters in the past as to who is responsible for the bills and not once did the hospital say they were. Which leads me to assume it will be billed to the family.

There's also the adverse effects on the fetus by the prolong loss of oxygen when the mother died. This isn't a situation where the mother was alive but critical when she was placed on the life support. She was already dead and they were trying to revive her but were unable to do so. Her husband states she was unconscious and unresponsive, her face blue from lack of oxygen when he found her. Her prolonged loss of oxygen was severe enough to kill her brain, how can that have not caused damage to the fetus' development?

ryan_cats

(2,061 posts)
44. I thought the hospital was going to check the fetus this week?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:47 PM
Jan 2014

I thought the hospital was going to check the fetus this week? Since the fetus went through the same lack of oxygen as the mother, it seems it would be injured as well. Their logic is the fetus was only several weeks old and still had time to develop but the last I'd heard on this was that the hospital was going to check the fetus heartbeat, do an ultrasound and an amniocenteses but I haven't heard anything.

Contrast this with the teenegaer who had surgery in the San Francisco area who the doctors say was brain dead and was actually a corpse so they didn't feed her and only kept the respirator on her going against the families wishes who wanted her fed to see if her brain activity would increase as the brain swelling went down. In fact, the family took their daughter to another facility and I haven't heard anything since.

So, the first one the family doesn't want her kept alive but the hospital is doing so against the families' wishes and the second case, the family wants to keep their daughter alive to see if there's any hopes and again the hospital is going against the family.

This is why it's nice to have an advance directive when you go to the hospital.

Each case is a heart breaker and if the baby is born but severely disabled, who is going to pay for the babies care?

LisaL

(44,967 posts)
47. Yes, they were planning to do tests soon.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:50 PM
Jan 2014

I am not sure if it's this week but in the near future hospital was going to carry out more detailed tests.

Cerridwen

(13,252 posts)
50. Back in December, a local publication
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 04:56 PM
Jan 2014

included information for helping the family with the expense. The link is here: http://www.wfaa.com/news/local/With-pregnant-wife-unresponsive-on-life-support-husband-hopes-to-fulfil-her-wishes-236654371.html

In an article at cnn yesterday

Notably, officials at the Fort Worth, Texas, hospital where 33-year-old Marlise Munoz is have not publicly declared her dead (though they have not disputed her husband's assertions either). Erick Munoz -- like his wife, a paramedic by training -- said the doctors told him Marlise "had lost all activity in her brain stem," and an accompanying chart stated she was "brain dead," according to his lawsuit. {emphasis added}



Drew Richards

(1,558 posts)
108. WAIT...I GOT AN IDEA. IF they wont declare her dead then technically shes alive and a patient
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 10:39 PM
Jan 2014

doesn't that mean he should be able to legally transfer her to another hospital..say out of state?

And say fuck you to the hospital?

god I hope he has a lawyer and has thought of this...

stg81

(351 posts)
61. Family argues a legally dead person is not a "patient", therefore statute does not apply
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 05:56 PM
Jan 2014

You cannot provide "life sustaining care and treatment" to a body that is legally dead

 

HockeyMom

(14,337 posts)
79. A corpse incubating a fetus
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:17 PM
Jan 2014

Excuse me, but the organs cannot be used without PERMISSION before being donated, but a CORPSE can be used as an incubator? Total disrespect for the DEAD. Living or dead don't matter, only the unborn. What happens after birth, these people could care less.

ljm2002

(10,751 posts)
80. Not only that...
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 07:23 PM
Jan 2014

...but it is likely the fetus suffered damage when she went without oxygen for a prolonged period of time. So, the hospital wants to force the birth of a damaged baby just because it can be done -- and then guess who gets to deal with the child's problems for the foreseeable future? Hint: not the hospital, nor any of its staff.

But even if there were no issue of fetal damage, it is still the decision of the family, not the hospital. Legally the fetus is not a person, not yet, and it seems to me there is no legal reason why this should be allowed to continue.

How horrifying for the family, to have been dealing with such a terrible tragedy to begin with, and now her dead body will be forced to give birth and the family will have had no say in it. Uuuggghhh.

 

kestrel91316

(51,666 posts)
96. The very second that child is delivered, the husband needs to file a wrongful birth lawsuit
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 08:27 PM
Jan 2014

to cover lifetime care for what is NOT going to be a normal child.

jmowreader

(50,522 posts)
110. I agree with you, but who would the defendant be?
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 10:46 PM
Jan 2014

My preference would be the Texas legislature for passing this horrific law.

Th1onein

(8,514 posts)
101. Please stop with the dehumanizing language.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 08:40 PM
Jan 2014

Whatever she is, she is still someone who is loved by her family.

malaise

(268,594 posts)
161. Fact - every dead person is a corpse
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 06:19 AM
Jan 2014

A dead body is a corpse. People do not pass away - they die - we all pass from life to death.

Th1onein

(8,514 posts)
169. No one is denying that fact. But when you're talking about a family member's loved one....
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 08:31 PM
Jan 2014

it's not a nice thing to say about them. All of the other facts you are stating are self-evident, and quite unnecessary, at this point.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
114. Her family says she's dead.
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 11:26 PM
Jan 2014

In fact, that is the basis for the lawsuit they filed to stop this horror show.

They want to lay her to rest because they love her, and want to follow her wishes.

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