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- <text id=92TT2880>
- <title>
- Dec. 28, 1992: Mercy's Friend or Foe?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Dec. 28, 1992 What Does Science Tell Us About God?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 36
- Mercy's Friend or Foe?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Dr. Kevorkian takes on the state of Michigan over physician-
- assisted suicide, he may be undermining his own crusade
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--With reporting by Andrea Sachs/New York
- </p>
- <p> Dr. Jack Kevorkian has spent much of his medical life
- searching for ways to make better use of human bodies,
- especially dead ones. Thirty years ago, as a young pathologist
- in Pontiac, Michigan, he became the first doctor to transfuse
- blood directly from a corpse into a live patient. He marveled
- at the possible uses--on battlefields, for instance, or during
- a natural disaster--and lamented the fact that public distaste
- for the procedure would probably preclude its clinical
- acceptance.
- </p>
- <p> Over time he turned his attention to patients who were
- soon to be dead, looking to salvage whatever he could. The
- execution of condemned murderers seemed an extravagant waste,
- since controversial drugs and surgical techniques could be
- tested on criminal volunteers. The prisoner's brain provided a
- unique opportunity to study a criminal mind--"an intact,
- living" brain, he emphasized. Further, from each prisoner might
- be harvested enough organs to save half a dozen lives. He has
- proposed an auction market in which rich people would bid for
- organs, and the money could be used to provide them to the poor
- for free.
- </p>
- <p> Before long he found that his pathological interests
- precluded his being hired by any hospital. His ostracism,
- however, did leave him more time to rummage around flea markets,
- looking for old toys with small gears that he could use to build
- his inventions. His first "Mercitron," a precursor to the
- carbon-monoxide delivery contraption he provided to two more
- suicidal women last week, now sits in his lawyer's office. "He's
- very skilled in mechanical engineering," says Geoffrey Fieger.
- "He's very talented, in everything he builds."
- </p>
- <p> Forced retirement also left him more time for painting, a
- hobby he has enjoyed for many years. His artistic tastes run to
- the surreal; one painting is called Nausea. Another, Coma. A
- third, an allegorical study of genocide, is set in a frame that,
- by various accounts, was either painted red to look like blood
- or painted in actual human blood that Kevorkian salvaged from
- outdated samples at the local blood bank, and from his own arm.
- </p>
- <p> Kevorkian has become the kind of fanatic who could prompt
- people who share his views to change their minds. Two out of
- three Americans say they think doctors should be allowed to help
- desperately sick patients commit suicide, a cause for which
- Kevorkian has become the most celebrated champion. But as he
- appears on television after each new death, invoking a higher
- moral authority and ignoring court orders and judges'
- instructions, Kevorkian begins to embody all the warnings about
- how euthanasia, once unleashed, could get out of hand. "It's
- almost become obligatory for people who write or speak about the
- subject to distance themselves from Kevorkian," says Professor
- Yale Kamisar at the University of Michigan law school, who has
- followed the doctor's career for years. "They say, `I'm not in
- favor of what Kevorkian is doing, but...'"
- </p>
- <p> For one thing, Kevorkian has made clear his intention to
- work outside the law. When a Michigan judge dismissed murder
- charges against him but advised him against continuing his
- crusade, Kevorkian replied that he would never shirk his
- "medical duty. If my colleagues won't work with me, I will work
- alone." In 1988 Kevorkian suggested to founder Derek Humphry
- that the Hemlock Society, which supports euthanasia for the
- terminally ill, join forces with him and set up a suicide
- center. Humphry's response was "We're not lawbreakers, we're law
- reformers." But he recalls that Kevorkian insisted that such a
- center would get them publicity. "There are many people in the
- Hemlock Society who admire him," says Humphry. "My reservations
- are that he never talks about changing the law, and doctors
- won't follow him until the law is changed."
- </p>
- <p> Even passionate supporters of euthanasia argue that there
- must always be safeguards--second opinions from disinterested
- doctors, psychological evaluations, family consultations--before any decision is made. Though Kevorkian is adamant about
- the precautions he takes, his enthusiasm for testing new
- techniques and promoting his cause has naturally raised concerns
- about his neutrality in counseling potential clients. A
- pathologist by training, he is not in the best position to make
- a judgment about patients when they are still alive.
- </p>
- <p> The law rushed to Governor John Engler's desk last week,
- which would temporarily ban physician-assisted suicide until a
- commission can make a recommendation, is aimed directly at
- Kevorkian. But the doctor says it makes no difference to him if
- Michigan's elected representatives turn him into an outlaw. "He
- has told me that even if this does become a law, he would
- violate it," says Fieger. The problem is that once zealots claim
- the right to choose which laws they'll obey, all the underlying
- trust that permits professionals, and especially doctors, to
- function disappears.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the discomfiting pattern that, though men
- are three times as likely as women to commit suicide, so far
- all of Dr. Kevorkian's suicide patients have been female. It's
- not that he has any special fondness for watching women die,
- but rather, he has explained, because "women are just far more
- realistic about facing death and have got the guts to do it."
- Kevorkian considers his treatment a form of toughlove. He
- recalls his first client, Janet Adkins, a vibrant 54-year-old
- just diagnosed with Alzheimer's who sought out Kevorkian because
- she was terrified of what the disease would do to her. "I loved
- that woman," he told the Washington Post. "And what I had to do
- was tough."
- </p>
- <p> That doesn't satisfy his critics particularly. "He's more
- like a serial killer than a physician," says Professor George
- Annas of Boston University's school of medicine. There is
- already some evidence that Kevorkian's relentless grandstanding
- is raising alarms among euthanasia supporters. Last year the
- State of Washington debated Initiative 119, which would have
- allowed physician-assisted suicide. In early October the measure
- was heavily favored. Two weeks later, Kevorkian helped his
- second and third clients, both chronically but not terminally
- ill, to kill themselves. The ammunition he provided euthanasia
- opponents may well have helped defeat the measure in November.
- </p>
- <p> It is unlikely that lawmakers in Michigan would have acted
- had Kevorkian not forced their hand. When his sixth client, a
- 45-year-old cancer patient, came to Michigan to consult with him
- and killed herself on Nov. 23, the bill that had stalled swiftly
- sailed through the legislature in less than 10 days, on
- overwhelming votes in both the upper and lower chambers. "It's
- just the outright assisting in a killing that this bill will
- prohibit," says representative Joseph Palamara, a Democratic
- state legislator from Wyandotte. "It doesn't affect whatsoever
- doctors who withhold or withdraw food."
- </p>
- <p> In fact the law will indeed affect other doctors, because
- Kevorkian's crusade has in some way touched them all. In recent
- years the leaders of the hospice movement, specialists in pain
- management and depression, have been transforming the dying
- process, much as the natural-childbirth movement did to
- childbearing over the past generation. In a sense they are
- racing against the radicals. Once they can offer a more gentle
- and dignified alternative to either a life ground down by pain
- or a death in a high-tech hell, the demand for Dr. Kevorkian's
- service will disappear.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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