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Betancourt v. Trinitas Hospital

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Betancourt v. Trinitas Hospital
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division
Full case nameJacqueline Betancourt, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Trinitas Hospital, Defendant-Appellant.
DecidedAugust 13, 2010 (2010-08-13)
Citation(s)1 A.3d 823; 415 N.J. Super. 301
Court membership
Judges sittingPhilip Carchman, Anthony Parrillo, Victor Ashrafi
Case opinions
Decision byPer curiam

Betancourt v. Trinitas Hospital, 1 A.3d 823 (2010), is a New Jersey legal case concerning whether a hospital may unilaterally refuse care to a patient on the grounds that it is futile to prolong the person's life because there is little chance that the condition will improve. It has become the focal point of the ongoing debate surrounding denial of care among professional bioethicists.[1]

Background

Ruben Betancourt of Elizabeth, New Jersey was a 73-year-old retired machinist who suffered from anoxic encephalopathy, a form of brain damage, following successful thoracic surgery for a thymus gland tumor at Trinitas Regional Medical Center in 2008.[1] His doctors determined that he was in a persistent vegetative state, removed his dialysis port, and sought to impose a do not resuscitate order on him. In response to this decision, Betancourt's daughter went to court and sought legal guardianship of her father.[1] The hospital, which is affiliated with the Catholic Church, opposed her petition.[1] In court papers, Trinitas argued that "Mr. Betancourt is dying...and that dying is being prolonged by the treatment rendered." A trial court ruled in favor of Betancourt's daughter, finding that she was unquestionably a loving, appropriate guardian, and was also the unanimous choice of her family.[2] The hospital appealed the court's decision.[1] In contrast, Betancourt's daughter does not accept this diagnosis. "My father would turn his head," she told an interviewer. "One time I was joking, my father started laughing. How can you tell me a person like that is nonresponsive?".[1] When asked if Betancourt was suffering pain, a Trinitas doctor answered, "I know it. I've seen it." An amicus brief filed in the case calls the diagnosis into question, as pain is not consistent with the diagnosis of persistent vegetative state.[3]

Betancourt died in May 2009. On Friday, August 13, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey issued their opinion in Betancourt v. Trinitas. In essence the court ruled that because Betancourt had died, the issue was now moot. Thus, they neither support the plaintiff’s nor the defendant’s positions.

Law and ethics

According to Sam Germana, vice president and general counsel for Trinitas, the hospital's ethics committee met multiple times to evaluate Betancourt's case. "Our doctors usually err on the side of doing anything," he told the press. "It's extremely rare when they say 'enough is enough, we're just keeping organs alive." At the time of the committee meetings, Betancourt's care had directly cost the hospital, by its own estimate, $1.6 million.[4]

The case had become a cause célèbre for both supporters and opponents of the right of patients, and their surrogate decision-makers, to choose whether to discontinue life-sustaining medical treatment. Among those who had taken the hospital's side are the New Jersey Hospital Association, the Medical Society of New Jersey, and the Catholic Healthcare Partnership of New Jersey.[4] These organizations have argued that unconscious, elderly, or terminally ill patients do not have an "unfettered" right to choose whether their lives will be sustained.[1] They also argued that hospitals have a duty to conserve their limited resources for all patients.[1]

The family has received support from a prominent authority on medical futility, Thaddeus Mason Pope, and conservative commentator Wesley J. Smith.[5][6] Smith has written: "If the hospital won the case, doctors and bioethicists would, in effect, have been given the right to declare that the life of a patient diagnosed in a PVS is futile, and once that principle became well established in law and medical ethics, such ad hoc health care rationing wouldn’t end with catastrophically ill people such as this patient."[6]

In explaining its reasoning for dismissing the case as moot, the court stated:

"Courts normally will not decide issues when a controversy no longer exists, and the disputed issues have become moot…" "A critical factor in the mootness analysis is whether the unusual circumstances of a case make a recurrence of this specific set of facts unlikely. This is the decisive issue here."

The Court opined that it is up to legislature to handle the issues raised by the case:

"While we dismiss the appeal, we do not see our declination to resolve the issue on this record and in this case to be an end to the debate. The issues presented are profound and universal in application. They warrant thoughtful study and debate not in the context of overheated rhetoric in the battlefield of active litigation, such as marked the Schiavo debate, but in thoughtful consideration by the Legislature well as Executive agencies and Commissions charged with developing the policies that impact on the lives of all."

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Sataline, Suzanne (June 4, 2010). "Court Weighs Death Decision". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on March 31, 2022. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
  2. ^ "RE: Betancourt v Trinitas Hospital" (PDF). Thaddeuspope.com. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  3. ^ "Betancourt v. Trinitas -- Not Dead Yet Amicus Brief". Medicalfutility.blogspot.com. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Brief and Appendice for Amici Curiae" (PDF). Thaddeuspope.com. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  5. ^ "New Case -- Betancourt v. Trinitas Regional Medical Hospital". Medicalfutility.blogspot.com. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Defeat for Futile Care in New Jersey - Wesley J. Smith". Firstthings.com. Retrieved May 24, 2019.

External links

This page was last edited on 22 May 2023, at 00:24
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