Karen McCulloh, Nat’l. Org. of Nurses with Disabilities – Advisor: Basic Life Support

Recently,  Not Dead Yet News and Commentary, posted on May 27, 2021 an Op-Ed written by United Kingdom NDY founder, Baroness Jane Campbell who stated,   The Government should be helping people to live– not die through assisted suicide.  The National Organization of Nurses with Disabilities (NOND), a partner with NDY that stands against Physician Assisted Suicide (PAS), appreciates this Op-Ed, and while NDY has taken the leadership to strongly advocate against PAS, now there is a way for people with disabilities to confront PAS by helping to save lives.  2,781 people with disabilities already have.

Advisor:  Basic Life Support Program–

American Heart Association

When the National Organization of Nurses with Disabilities was founded in 2003, the big question was how can anyone become a nurse, or remain a nurse if they are unable to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)?  NOND worked to resolve this question not only for disabled healthcare professionals but also for all persons with disabilities across the nation that have physical mobility limitations or other chronic health conditions that impact their ability to perform CPR.

NOND’s mission is directed to promoting equity for people with disabilities and chronic health conditions in nursing through education and advocacy.  How NOND accomplishes its work occurs in a variety of ways for example, NOND’s collaboration with the American Heart Association to develop the Advisor:  Basic Life Support Program.

When nurses apply for a job, employment may be contingent upon the nurse being Basic Life Support (BLS) trained/certified.  Some nurses with disabilities have significant physical mobility limitations and are unable to perform all or any of the skills required to perform CPR.  Employer exemption, if willing to exempt nurses from this policy, will depend upon the essential functions of the job.  Most nursing schools require students to receive CPR training, and have an up-to-date BLS card.

In order to address Employer and nursing school policies, NOND reached out to the American Heart Association (AHA) National Center that provides CPR training across the nation, as well as internationally, and requested AHA to collaborate as a “thought leader” with NOND.   NOND Directors believed that collaboration with AHA could result in the development of a new program directed to healthcare professionals and people with disabilities who are unable to perform CPR but could advise someone else on performing CPR while Code Blue Teams or first responders are on the way.

This precedent setting program focuses on the abilities of people with disabilities so that they may direct others to perform CPR.  Candidates who pass the online cognitive portion of the HeartCode® BLS Provider Course and successfully advise an instructor on how to perform CPR, and use an automated external defibrillator (AED), can receive an Advisor: BLS card.

It is important to know that nurses and other individuals with different types of disabilities can perform CPR to the required BLS standards.  Successful completion of the standard BLS card may be accomplished with or without accommodations.  Requests for accommodation if needed should be communicated to the AHA instructor, giving the instructor time to arrange for accommodations for example, request for a sign language interpreter.

The Advisor:  BLS Program will be one year old in July 2021.  As of April 21, 2021, 2,781 individuals with disabilities have enrolled in the program. It is not known how many employers or nursing schools have accepted the Advisor Card but NOND does know that enrollment has included nurses at some healthcare institutions where the Advisor card is accepted in place of the standard BLS card.   It is also known that people with significant disabilities are helping to save lives.

Helpful Information:  Links provided by the American Heart Association

Sincere appreciation is extended to the American Heart Association National Center staff that worked in collaboration with NOND volunteers, Dr. Dawn Dubsky, Dr. Bridgette Jenkins, Shelia Levings, and Karen McCulloh who took the lead in working with AHA in developing the Advisor: Basic Life Support Program.

About the author:

Karen McCulloh, RN, BS, is an RN who has multiple disabilities, including dual sensory impairment (Deaf/Blind), Multiple Sclerosis and has recently become a cancer survivor.  She is one of the co-founders of the National Organization of Nurses with Disabilities, and has served as president of the organization twice.  She is currently serving as the immediate past president and as a member of the NOND Advisory Committee.   After becoming visually impaired, Karen left the clinical arena and established her own small business where she developed a new field in nursing, Community Health Disability Education.  She moved into workforce development with a focus on Diversity and Inclusion of people with disabilities in the workforce, and is a strong promoter of nursing as a career for academically qualified people with disabilities.

Coleman Quoted in Gothamist: The Pandemic Threatened Their Ventilators

[Ed. note: We previously reported on the court case discussed in the article below here: Not Dead Yet, NMD United, et al. Sue NY Governor On Ventilator Re-Allocation Guidelines.]

Great Op-Ed By NDY UK Founder Baroness Jane Campbell

The Government should be helping people to live
– not die through assisted suicide

The Telegraph
Baroness Campbell
26 May 2021

Today a Bill to legalise assisted suicide is being presented in Parliament. Such a change has been considered many times in the past but has always been rejected for the same reasons. Despite what the propaganda says, the majority of people it is intended to help didn’t ask for it and don’t want it. In fact we are fearful of any change in the law that would weaken the protection we rely upon now.

Those seeking to change the law say it is intended to alleviate “intolerable suffering” only for those with a terminal illness and less than six months to live. Whether or not a person meets these criteria will be determined by two independent doctors and a High Court Judge. In effect, they will be required to endorse the suicidal person’s view that they would be better off dead and the state should assist in that objective.

At present, the law treats all suicidal persons equally. We try to deter them from carrying out their wishes. We protect them from themselves by giving support. It is a very necessary protection and must not be withdrawn from those of us who are ill or disabled, especially at our lowest points, when we might question the point of going on, particularly if those around us believe we would be better off dead.

In every jurisdiction where a form of assisted suicide has been legalised, the numbers dying in this way increase over time. It is logical that it should. Why deny someone their wish when safeguards are open to interpretation, or criteria have been changed?

The government should be helping people to live – not to die through assisted suicide.

The best way to help the terminally ill is to better invest in palliative care and find a solution to the social care crisis. Once assisted suicide is law, society has endorsed it as an option, equal to that of life. Those who had never considered it will be told that it is an option. Their families, friends, health and social care professions will all know it as an option too. It is hard enough already for those of us with terminal illnesses and disabilities to get the support services we need to live active independent lives. For essential support to become merely the alternative option to assisted suicide terrifies us. That is why no organisation of terminally ill or disabled people has sought a change in the law. Why do others think they know what’s best for us?

Whilst many reasons are given, they boil down to a fear of illness and disability and the changes to independence that may bring: loss of mobility, loss of income, loss of respect, neglect and, potentially, abuse. Fear of relying on others and of being a burden. It tells us a lot about how society views terminally ill and disabled people.

Of course, the vast majority of us don’t see ourselves in that way. We don’t want the special treatment of an assisted suicide. We want basic human rights to live with dignity and respect so we can enjoy life. With the right support, most of us are pretty good at it.

Covid-19 has been described as “this generation’s polio”. Its effects have been felt by everyone and, for many, it has had life-changing consequences. According to the latest figures, disabled people make up 59% of all COVID-19 related deaths. In meeting this challenge the country has come together in universal praise of those working on the NHS* and social care front lines. The desire for them to receive the funding and resources needed to expand and improve services has been overwhelming.

Legalising assisted suicide, especially now, should not be part of the solution. We need help to live – not to die. That means investment in palliative care, solutions to the social care crisis and continued financial support for our world-class NHS.

Last time the House of Commons considered legalising assisted suicide (in 2015), it was rejected by a majority of 212, affirmation that terminally ill and disabled people are entitled to equal protection under the law. What has changed in the last six years to require the issue to be debated again? Certainly not the views of palliative care doctors or geriatricians, who remain firmly opposed to a change in the law.

Have the lives of terminally ill and disabled people improved to the extent that they are now regarded as equal members of society? Clearly not, because why otherwise would supporters of today’s bill seek to limit its effect to only us?

*National Health Service

Link to article.

Marilyn Golden: Keep the safeguards in California’s ‘End-of-Life’ law

[This op-ed appeared in the May 13, 2021 edition of Capitol Weekly.]

Keep the safeguards in California’s ‘End-of-Life’ law

BY MARILYN GOLDEN POSTED 05.13.2021

Assisted suicide is already legal in California through the so-called End-of-Life Option Act, narrowly passed by the California Legislature and signed by then-Gov. Brown in 2015. The bill was opposed by both Democrat and Republican Assembly members and Senators, but passed during a contested Special Legislative Session on Medi-Cal funding.

Despite the bill’s narrow passage, now just a few years into the new law, its proponents want to eliminate some of the very “safeguards” they used as arguments to pass their bill.

The new bill, Senate Bill 380 by Sen. Susan Eggman (D-Stockton), would eliminate the 2026 sunset provision that doctors, patient advocates, and legislators included to undertake a thorough examination of California’s experience with this controversial law. This new bill will also eliminate the 15-day safety period to receive deadly prescription drugs, an important protection because studies such as one from The Lancet show the high percentage of patients who change their minds after deciding to hasten their deaths.

This rush to erode the safeguards included in the 2015 End of Life Option Act is dangerous public policy.

During the 2015 debate on the End of Life Options Act, former State Senator Bill Monning (a bill author) noted in Healthline that, “co-authors on this bill … endeavored to build in protections that are stronger than any of the states where this has been practiced.”

Monning’s statement is untrue because the bill’s minimal  protections and limited data, when compared to other states where assisted suicide is legal, remain central to its problems today.

The Death with Dignity National Center, supporters of the End of Life Option Act, contradict this new effort to eliminate patient protections in their website FAQs, as recently as April 12, 2021. The notation states, “Death with dignity statutes contain a number of safeguards, protecting patients from abuse and coercion … the patient must make two oral requests, at least 15 days apart.” (Source: https://www.deathwithdignity.org/faqs/). But in this new bill, proponents want to eliminate this very “safeguard” they once held up.

This rush to erode the safeguards included in the 2015 End of Life Option Act is dangerous public policy. There is simply no data or science to support removing them so soon.

Annual reports on the End of Life Option Act required by the State of California do not contain any data whatsoever detailing complications or patients’ reasons for requesting the lethal drugs. For the limited data that is provided, too much remains listed as “unknown.” Over the past year, due to the COVID pandemic, we have become sadly familiar with how important medical and scientific data are in making informed public policy decisions; especially those involving life and death.

With the benefit of hindsight, it appears that the protections proponents touted as safeguards were no more than a ruse to get the original law passed.

For example, the latest California annual report on the End of Life Option Act released in July 2020 reports that 10% of those requesting the lethal drugs had an “unknown” insurance coverage, and it was “unknown” whether 7% ever received information about available hospice or palliative care options.

In a March 2021 New York Times interview with Dr. Diane E. Wright, longtime Director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care at Mount Sinai Hospital, Dr. Wright noted, “All the heartfelt adherence to restrictions that are announced when you first get the public to vote in favor of this go up in smoke once the practice is validated.”

Indeed, with the benefit of hindsight, it appears that the protections proponents touted as safeguards were no more than a ruse to get the original law passed.

Given the contentious history of the End of Life Options Act, as well as a patient healthcare infrastructure pushed to the breaking point by the COVID pandemic, it is neither wise nor appropriate to remove any of the law’s protections.

Further, any effort to expand assisted suicide policy in California is in stark contrast to the on-going, unresolved debate on healthcare disparity and inequity within ethnic and minority communities who lack access to palliative, hospice and other care for serious and terminal diseases.

Prioritizing the right to die rather than the basic means needed to live is clueless at best, if not disingenuous.

Enough of the doubletalk, and the double standards, that accompanies the double jeopardy that the repeal of assisted suicide’s protections would no doubt unleash. The minimal protections established in 2015 are just as necessary now, perhaps even more so.

No matter what they say, proponents of assisted suicide can’t have it both ways.

Editor’s Note: Marilyn Golden is senior policy analyst at the Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund.

Joan Cavanagh Had Some Words for the CT Mirror Which They Didn’t Print, So We Will

I am tired of reading stories in the Mirror and elsewhere that minimize or hardly bother to mention the strong opposition to Assisted Suicide legislation that has been successfully spearheaded by Second Thoughts Connecticut and is embraced by many progressives and other disability rights activists. The slick and well-funded marketing campaigns of the Hemlock Society (re-branded Compassion and Choices) have helped to make it appear that the only significant opposition comes from the Catholic Church. Nothing could be further from the truth. As someone who has worked against the death penalty, for reproductive freedom (including abortion rights), against racism and white supremacy, is a supporter of Single Payer health care, and has also had to fight attempts by the existing medical system to withhold life-saving treatment, I for one consider my long-term activism against these dangerous bills a seamless part of my beliefs and actions for human rights.

“My life, my death, my choice,” the slogan of Compassion and Choices, found its way to a sign at a Trump supporters’ super-spreader event last year, which is not surprising, since the implication is that individual behavior has no impact on the lives of others. While it may provide an individual “choice” for a select few, among its many evils, the legalization of Medical Assisted Suicide also opens the door to increased rationing of health care, which is an existential threat to the many.

Anyone who has been victimized by medical practitioners’ judgments about a patient’s “quality of life” or lack thereof coupled with institutional mandates to cut costs and insurance companies’ refusals to pay for life-saving procedures can see how easily this so-called choice can morph into no choice at all for certain categories of people. The COVID crisis has dramatically revealed the ways in which poor, disabled, elderly, black and brown people are already discriminated against within the medical system. It is appalling that our elected officials refuse repeatedly to listen to the lived experience of so many of us but keep bringing up these bills to allow our doctors to kill us year after year after year. And it is long past time that the news media do its job to report on this issue by going beyond the false narrative that proponents try to spin as to who opposes this legislation, and why.

Joan Cavanagh