WASHINGTON(BP)-Disabled Americans feel vulnerable in the wake
of Terri Schiavo's death and need societal and legal changes if
their lives are going to be protected, leaders of two disability
organizations said.
In the hours after Schiavo died March 31, both Joni Eareckson
Tada and Diane Coleman said the brain-damaged Florida woman's
death and the events leading to it do not bode well for other
severely disabled people unless some changes are implemented.
Schiavo, 41, died nearly two weeks after the tube that
provided her with food and water was disconnected at a state
judge's order. For years, her parents and her husband had been in
a legal struggle over whether she should live or die. Acting as
her guardian, Michael Schiavo, her husband, gained court approval
for the removal of the tube, saying she did not want to live in a
severely disabled state, though no written direction from his
wife existed.
Though Tada said she prays God will use Schiavo's example
"to stave off this terrible culture of death and give us a
fresh re-energizing to build a culture of life," the popular
evangelical Christian author and speaker also said her death
"alarms me deeply."
"The death of Terri Schiavo will adversely impact
literally thousands of Americans who have severe mental
incapabilities whose legal guardians might not have their best
wishes at heart," Tada said on the April 1 radio broadcast
of Focus on the Family.
Coleman, president of Not Dead Yet, told Baptist Press,
"[W]hat we are seeing here is the dismantling of the
constitutional rights of people in guardianship. No longer will
there be the presumption for life.
"The social presumption that [Schiavo] would be better
off dead appears to have influenced the decisions in the
case," Coleman said. "We feel threatened by this,
almost as if there is a cognitive test for personhood under the
law."
Joni and Friends is a Christian ministry to the disabled that
Tada started in 1979. She became a quadriplegic in a diving
accident at the age of 17. Her testimony of God's work in her
life has become well-known among Christians throughout the world.
Coleman, a lawyer, founded Not Dead Yet in 1996 to combat
assisted suicide and euthanasia on behalf of the disabled. She
was disabled at birth and has used a wheelchair since she was 11.
Both of their organizations agree some steps need to be taken
to protect the rights and lives of the disabled. They recommend,
in statements on their Internet sites, there should be:
Federal review in state cases of contested decisions
about withdrawing feeding tubes when there is no advance
directive or personally chosen guardian.
State-by-state reform of laws governing guardianship
and healthcare decisions in order to protect against involuntary
euthanasia.
A moratorium on the removal of food and water from
severely disabled people when the latest diagnostic procedures
are unavailable.
In all, Not Dead Yet has listed eight steps on its Web site,
www.notdeadyet.org, that it says need to be taken to guard the
disabled. Joni and Friends also calls for a change in terminology
in a statement on its site, www.joniandfriends.org. Society must
stop using the phrase "persistent vegetative state,"
Tada said.
"There's just too many people with significant
disabilities who have been called vegetables, and this must
stop," Tada said on Focus on the Family, which was taped the
day Schiavo died. "That is beyond demeaning. It is
dehumanizing, and when people with significant disabilities are
labeled like that, then the discussion all too quickly next turns
to death, pulling their feeding tube or warehousing them in a
hospice.
"Something else that has bothered me as I have listened
to the national media - everybody has been talking about whether
or not Terri is 'going to get better someday,' as though that
fact was a criteria for her life," Tada said. "However,
millions of Americans with disabilities will 'never get better'
by today's standards, and we believe that a quality of one's life
should never be a criteria to put them to death. Life is the most
irreplaceable and fundamental condition of what it means to be
human. It's a gift of God, the Author of life; and disabled
people, no matter how significant their handicapping condition,
have that right to life."
Coleman told Baptist Press her organization would not have
filed three friend-of-the-court briefs on behalf of Terri Schiavo
had she chosen her husband as her guardian and made clear her
intentions regarding her care. The court's willingness to grant
the guardian his request in the Schiavo case contrasts with
reports of parental abuse and neglect when society expects the
government to intervene, Coleman said.
"Unfortunately, people with disabilities are not so
valued [as are children]," Coleman said. "We share a
social devaluation that is so strong that most people are sure we
are living a fate worse than death and that they would never want
to live" that way.
"[W]hat we've learned like any other minority group, you
might say, is you can't trust majority culture... In some cases
you can't even trust your own family ...," she said.
"While many caregivers are wonderful and value us, not all
do.
"The most telling thing is [Schiavo's] guardian forbade
qualified people from giving her swallowing tests, swallowing
therapy" the last seven years, Coleman said. "She might
not have needed a feeding tube really. A lot of people in nursing
homes are on feeding tubes, not because they cannot eat but
because there is not enough staff to feed them. That's the
context we are in."
For Not Dead Yet and at least some other disability
organizations, this is a civil rights issue, not a
sanctity-of-life or culture war issue, Coleman said. Her
organization is as concerned about conservatives cutting Medicaid
and Medicare funds as it is about liberals wanting to kill the
disabled quickly in the name of compassion, she said.
A bill to legalize physician-assisted suicide has been
introduced in California, and Tada fears what happened in the
Schiavo case will embolden its supporters in the state
legislature.
"There will be those who will look at the situation of
Terri Schiavo and turn it on its head," Tada said.
"Pro-euthanasia advocates ... will say, 'Oh how awful that
this woman had to linger so long toward her death. She should
have been aided with a lethal injection of three grams of
phenobarbital to hasten her death more quickly and more
compassionately.'"
Tada said she was lying on her back as she was interviewed for
Focus on the Family. She had recently recovered from pneumonia
and had been mostly in bed for four or five days with a pressure
sore. Shortly before the interview, a friend had fed her by hand.
"It underscored how much people like me and people like
Terri Schiavo depend on strong advocates to be by our bedside to
fight and to protect and to safeguard the protections around
people with severe disabilities," Tada said.