Saturday, April 28, 2018

Alfie Evans: A Reasonable Economic Decision Disguised as a Horrific Moral Determination

The tragic case of Alfie Evans has roiled Great Britain and the world. Alfie was a 2 year old child in the United Kingdom with an unknown degenerative brain disease who eventually deteriorated to the point that he required life support- his brain had become mostly liquid, and he could not see, speak, or hear. Alder Hey hospital decided his condition was terminal and irreversible, and wanted to stop further treatment. His parents disagreed, and wanted to transfer care to another hospital in Italy which was willing to accept him. Alder Hey went to court, arguing that it was better that the child be allowed to die because keeping him alive was cruel and harmful. They ultimately won, and Alfie Evans passed away. This has sparked a great outcry, particularly among the pro-life movement in the US. And indeed, the idea that the state can literally declare that death is better than life for anyone should be horrifying to everyone.

But the decision to take Alfie off life support was a reasonable and ethical one- if it was justified as being fair to all patients. It is even a reasonable one for individual doctors to conclude that further treating a patient in front of them is harmful and not ethical. But when court decided it had the right to decide that the child should die rather than live, it became an abomination.

Monday, April 16, 2018

"Gun Control" Ideas that Might Actually Pass and Reduce Mass Shootings, From a Doctor and a Gun Owner

I am a resident physician in General Surgery at the Baylor College of Medicine, and I work and train a great deal at Ben Taub- one of only two Level I trauma centers in Houston, and thus one that sees an extraordinary number of Houston's victims of gun violence. But I am also a gun-owner, who took up shooting in the Boy Scouts. And, I am the son of immigrants who refuse to touch firearms, but yet who were free to immigrate to America because of their invention. Like most of Houston, I am thus a study of contradictions, and this gives rise to some unique ideas and perspectives on how to prevent mass shootings and gun violence that may actually find support from both sides in this divided time.

The Resident: Learn the Lessons, Laugh at Everything Else

A new medical TV show, The Resident, made a big splash in the social media- largely for a perceived negative portrayal of physicians.  One EM physician even published a long editorial on NBC news condemning it as reducing trust in the entire medical profession.  The creator of the show, Amy Holden Jones, has been viciously attacked on twitter for the show, and even accused of causing patient deaths by decreasing trust in the medical establishment.