Mark Komrad in Belgium
A
Psychiatrist Visits Belgium: The Epicenter of Psychiatric Euthanasia
Mark
Komrad M.D.
Ethicist-in-Residence,
Sheppard Pratt Health Systems
On Sept 8, 2017 I was invited to give the opening
lecture in a fairly remarkable symposium in Belgium on their 15-year-old
practice of the voluntarily euthanasia of psychiatric patients. I
spoke to an audience of Belgian mental health professionals and administrators.
My charge was to present to them something of “the outside world’s
view” of this issue, and touch on the APA’s recently issued Position
Statement regarding medical euthanasia:
APA Position Statement: “. . . a psychiatrist should not prescribe or administer any
intervention to a non-terminally ill person for the purpose of causing death.”
I had helped to craft this statement, and shepherd it
through the APA Assembly (where it was approved unanimously) and ultimately to
the Board of Trustees, who approved it as the official APA position in December
2016. That is one of the reasons I was invited to Belgium.
In 2002 Belgium legalized euthanasia by physician
(typically by injection) at the request of patients, and removed any
distinctions between terminal vs. nonterminal illness, and physical vs.
psychological suffering. As long as the condition is deemed “untreatable” and
“insufferable,” a psychiatric patient can be potentially eligible for
euthanasia. There is a consultative process that basically needs a minimum of
two doctors to agree about the patient’s eligibility. Also, the patient gets to
weigh-in on whether their condition is “treatable.” Since the patient has the
option to refuse treatments, this refusal may create an “untreatable”
situation. The evaluation pathway even makes it possible for a
psychiatric patient to be euthanized with only a single psychiatrist in
support. Once approved, some patients are euthanized by their own treating
psychiatrist. Alternatively, there are other physicians who will perform
euthanasia; though the number of such euthanizers is small (in fact, 70% of
psychiatric euthanasias are performed by one particularly zealous Belgian
psychiatrist, Dr. Lieve Thienpont).
About 500 inpatient psychiatric beds and a number of
outpatient clinics in Belgium are run by the Catholic Order, The Brothers of
Charity. Since the 2002 Belgian law was passed permitting psychiatric patients
to access euthanasia, like those with other qualifying medical conditions, the
Brothers would not allow the procedure or evaluation process in their
facilities. However, earlier this year they announced a change in policy: they
would be providing euthanasia consultations and lethal injections for
their psychiatric patients, much to the chagrin of Rome and the entire Catholic
world. In fact, the Pope has warned them to stand down or risk possible
excommunication. Since the hospital sponsoring this symposium, the Alexianan
Institute, in Tienen, is one of the Brothers’ hospitals, many members of the
Board of the Brothers of Charity were present at the symposium. They were
imminently preparing a response to the Pope’s objection. They had engaged a
professional ethicist, who spoke on the program with me, who had helped them
develop the theologically based ethical rationale for their astonishing shift
in policy. He explained that their approach now is to strongly encourage the
patient to live and engage in treatment, but The Brothers are now open to
providing euthanasia as a “last resort.” A lecturer who was a Jesuit priest and
an oncologist made reference to Jesus’ example of choosing his own death for
the greater good of mankind.
It was made clear to me on my arrival that the
majority of Belgians and their mass media support this practice. I learned that
although a number of psychiatrists feel very negatively about this, they are
reluctant to speak out for fear of being vilified in the press. Though back in
2002 several individual psychiatrists lobbied against the proposed law, medical
organizations did not, and have not expressed objections. Organized medicine
has not articulated a stance on this because there isn’t a strong enough
consensus among doctors, not even psychiatrists, I was told. Also, I learned
there isn’t a strong tradition of ethics activities at the organizational
level, or significant focus on an ethics code. The Belgian professionals were
quite aware that the majority of the world (many medical associations)
disagrees with the euthanasia of psychiatric patients. It seemed almost a point
of honor that they differed in this way, as if they are on higher moral ground
in a bold new era of medical ethics. Someone pointed to the fact that Belgium
and the Netherlands (which also has a robust program of psychiatric euthanasia)
after all, were the first nations to legalize gay marriage. They are claiming a
similar, higher moral ground in the matter of psychiatric euthanasia.
I ascertained that the background of religion is vital
to understanding some of the vectors influencing the development of euthanasia
in Belgium, and its slipping down the slope from terminal medical patients to
psychiatric patients, and even those not medically ill at all, but simply
“tired of living.” [In the Netherlands, the Minister of Justice and Minister of
Health are pushing to expand voluntary euthanasia to those who claim to
have a “completed life.”] For centuries Belgium has been a deeply
Catholic culture. However, in the latter part of the 20th century, the country
became extremely secularized. They refer to their culture now as
“post-Catholic.” In that sense, there is a pushback (conscious and unconscious)
against values for which the Catholic Church traditionally stands. One of those
core values is the absolute value of life. “Post-Catholic”
Belgians, rather see the value of upholding life as something to be balanced
against other values, which sometimes might supersede it (e.g. autonomy,
compassion, etc). Indeed, I heard that when a Belgian person asserts negative
feelings about euthanasia, they are sometimes assumed to be “Catholic,” and
that is used to invalidate their opinion. It will be interesting to see
how that kind of ad hominem invalidation might change if The Brothers
continue to sustain their position in defiance of Rome.
My presentation was entitled “Voluntary Euthanasia of
Patients with Mental Illnesses: An Inversion of Psychiatry’s Fundamental
Clinical and Ethical Values.” I reviewed a great deal of data about psychiatric
euthanasias in The Netherlands and Belgium, demonstrating how there has been a
profound “mission creep” in both countries, with an ever widening diameter of
eligibility, leading to an appalling slippery slope. I did make mention of the
ways that the leading and most celebrated psychiatrists in Nazi Germany lost
their ethical moorings, swept along by a powerful social movement, and
participated with dedication and relish in the “T4” program to exterminate the
mentally ill. Yes, that was involuntary euthanasia, but the lesson is how
psychiatry is vulnerable to a social tsunami, and can detach from core medical
ethics with enthusiasm, convinced they are pioneering a virtuous new
moral frontier. I reviewed the positions of several international medical
and psychiatric bodies that are against some of these practices, including that
of the APA. I then addressed a variety of social, clinical, financial, and
ethical concerns about psychiatric euthanasia. I particularly emphasized what I
called the “fundamental ethos of psychiatry” to prevent suicide and its special
skill set to address hopelessness, helplessness, desire to die, and inability
to see a better future. Human suffering is our core focus, no matter what the
diagnosis, and our approach is to address that suffering in various ways, but
not by snuffing out the life of the sufferer. I wouldn’t say it was a hostile
audience; just a largely skeptical one.
I went with an open mind to try and grasp the arguments
in support of psychiatric euthanasia from the people and clinicians immersed in
it as a “treatment” option for 15 years. What I heard from several other
speakers (philosopher, psychiatrist, psychologist, Jesuit priest who was also a
physician) was actually very disturbing to me. I was powerfully struck that
these people, who had been living with this as the law of the land, a fait
accompli, were starting with the accepted conclusion that it was OK, and
reasoning backwards to create an a postiori justification. The
conclusions are a given, so arguments were sought specifically to justify the
conclusion, and ideas that would lead to a contradictory conclusion were
filtered out. It was a powerful kind of sophistry. Indeed, there was even an
apologetic tone by some speakers; they seemed to be apologizing to themselves
as many were uncomfortable with the conclusion. The speaker who represented the
new ethical stance of The Brothers seemed particularly fraught, with a strong
sense of forcing an argument which, between the lines which virtually shouted,
“we really don’t want to do this, but the society we live in wants it.” They
were justifying literally killing (on request) the very kinds of patients to
whose hopelessness and helplessness I am devoted to address as a psychiatrist.
My reaction was visceral; I found myself eyeing the exits to bolt out and get
some fresh air. It wasn’t hard to imagine that I was at a psychiatric
conference in pre-war Germany, listening to learned speakers intellectualize
uses of psychiatry that were trying to topple the millenia-old gyroscope
of medical ethics in service of radical progressive shifts in social mores.
Euphemisms abounded that permitted a disengagement
from the prior, traditional moral baseline. There was talk of “compassion,”
“listening to and respecting the patient’s wishes,” “the end of doctor-knows
best,” and an apotheosis of autonomy to the point where it actually seemed
fetishized. It was certainly easy to follow the arguments for compassion, not
abandoning the patient, taking the patient’s suicidal wishes seriously,
exploring the extensive underlying reasons for wanting to die, etc. All of
these penultimate approaches sounded like good, solid psychiatry. What was not
presented at all was justification for taking the very last step— killing the
patient, for the physician him or herself to engage in killing. I had hoped at
the very least to hear the Belgian health-care establishment support
psychiatric euthanasia, but protest that it should not be occurring in the
House of Medicine, by the hand of a physician, and unhappiness that society had
come to expect that of them. It was quite clear to me that these
professionals who spoke have been living with this for far too long. They
are too far down the rabbit hole at this point. Those who became mental health
professionals since 15 years ago were professionally born into this paradigm,
and it’s all they have known their entire careers.
I don’t want to say that nobody had problems with it.
There were some calls for modification of the law, for example mandating a
minimum of at least a year or more to pass between approval and administration
of euthanasia for psychiatric patients. The sense was the system needed some
“fine tuning” but was fundamentally acceptable. Outrageous cases ares
“exceptions to an otherwise good system.” There was, however, a small group of
professionals who saw the whole situation as very negative, dire, and deeply
disturbing. On two different nights they invited me to dinner and wanted to
ventilate their concerns in a more private setting as well as to seek advice
about how they might better organize the professional opposition. They are
particularly concerned that the mainstream press has a robust buy-in for
psychiatric euthanasia. With the help of some wine over dinner, their agita
about the situation became more expressive.
It turns out that there have been a couple of positive
consequences of legalizing psychiatric euthanasia. One speaker, a
psychologist, showed how she used the euthanasia law to introduce to Belgium
the “Recovery” concept. She was able to build a peer-support-Recovery-oriented
group of patients who have been approved for euthanasia but haven’t yet
implemented it. The purpose of the group is to use the Recovery model to help
build more momentum, meaning, and support to live, an alternative to
proceeding with the approved euthanasia. One of the most common motivations
for psychiatric euthanasia in Belgium, according to data reported to review
commissions, is being “tired of living” or “loneliness.” So that gives a
compelling focus for a Recovery group. Another interesting development is a new
speciality —psychiatric palliative care. The criteria for euthanasia— a
condition that is “insufferable and untreatable”— has called into existence a
new category for the mentally ill who have those characteristics. I found it
particularly interesting to contemplate that the idea of an “untreatable”
condition in psychiatry really didn’t exist until legislatures in the Benelux
countries conjured it into legal existence, to be congruent with such a concept
in somatic medicine, particularly terminal somatic conditions with which physician
administered euthanasia originally began. Once the law was struck, this
categorization became an official clinical reality in psychiatry, and suddenly
“palliative care” for psychiatric patients began to make sense. Without
euthanasia, “palliative psychiatry” doesn’t seem much different than ordinary
psychiatry practiced with excellence (probably much more intensive than
average). This new psychiatric speciality provides for the “hopeless and
insufferable” cases a level of service intensity that can mitigate
the need many patients feel to have euthanasia. Indeed, one of the psychiatric
patients who attended this symposium told me that it is said in Belgium, “if
you want better and more intensive psychiatric care, just say you want
euthanasia.” In this way it reminds me of the U.S. discussion around outpatient
civil commitment—it is a path to more intensive services, which probably were
needed all along, and could have prevented the need for outpatient commitment.
Sadly, I left without much hope for Belgium to reverse
its stance on psychiatric euthanasia. It has been too many years, there is too
much widespread buy-in, the professional societies cannot get sufficient
coherence to express a viewpoint or take a stand, and psychiatrists fear being
seen as cruel, or retrogressive, or “crypto-Catholic” if they speak out too
loudly as individuals. The press will flock to their door with unpleasantly
critical, challenging interviews.
The APA’s position has taken on a critical importance
for those in Belgium who are seeking clear declarations of the unethical nature
of psychiatric euthanasia. As of this writing, the World Psychiatric
Association is one month away from voting on the following new ethics
statement: “Psychiatrists should not be involved in actions that are
intended to lead to the death of patients.” The influences of the APA and
WPA as prominent voices of organized psychiatry are important. But, unless the
medical and psychiatric establishment in Belgium can get its act together and
speak coherently against this appalling practice, objecting psychiatrists will
have to continue to be whisper their worries to each other, and little
Belgium will likely continue to convince themselves that they are virtuously
righteous in letting their doctors provide suicide to certain non-terminal
suicidal patients who are “untreatable” and request death.
PostScript:
Two days after my lecture an article about the
symposium appeared in Belgium’s leading newspaper De Standaard.
The journalist Veerle Beel wrote (in Dutch translated by Google
Translate):
“American psychiatrist Mark Komrad gave a fierce
argument against euthanasia in psychiatric patients. ‘The core task of
psychiatry is to prevent suicide,’ said Komrad. There was an ugly
comparison with eradication programs in Nazi Germany. It is not
uncommon for psychiatrists in Anglo-Saxon countries to rule out euthanasia in
psychiatric suffering. . . .The presence of an American at a symposium of an
institution affiliated with The Brothers of Charity could easily be seen as a
criticism within the organization, by people who agree with Komrad
. . . It was also highly uncomfortable for Flemish psychiatrist Joris
Vandenberghe [who has performed euthanasia on psychiatric patients]. He said,
“We know that what we do is provoking fierce reactions internationally, and at
times I felt outraged by what our American colleague said.”
So, I stirred a hornet’s nest. Once
someone (or a culture) has taken a life by euthanasia, it’s difficult to
go back and say that the law or policy that allowed it was mistaken. That would
create profound cognitive dissonance.
Finally, three days after the symposium, the Board of
The Brothers of Charity in Belgium, voted to SUSTAIN their decision to provide
euthanasia services to eligible psychiatric patients in their facilities,
against the objection of the Pope. Though disappointed, I am not
surprised. I certainly had no pretensions that my one lecture
could influence the course of a determined Catholic battleship that is
prepared to engage in battle with Rome.
Mark
S. Komrad M.D., DFAPA, FACP
Ethicist-in-Residence,
Sheppard Pratt
Faculty
of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins and University of Maryland
Author of : "You Need Help: A Step-by-Step Plan to Convince a Loved One to Get Counseling."
Author of : "You Need Help: A Step-by-Step Plan to Convince a Loved One to Get Counseling."
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