Legal struggles continue
over sick woman's care
By Gillian Long The Interim
Terri
Schindler-Schiavo, the woman who has been at the center of decade-long
euthanasia debate in Florida, was transferred from the hospice where
she resides to a nearby hospital on Aug. 13 when she began coughing
up blood. She had to be taken to the second facility because the hospice
her husband insists she live in is only equipped to provide palliative
care and cannot supply medical treatment. Terri's parents, Bob and Mary
Schindler, have protested her presence there because Terri is not dying.
However, her husband, who maintains guardianship despite living openly
in an adulterous relationship with a woman with whom he has just had
a child, will not allow her to be moved to a facility that can provide
more appropriate care, nor will he allow her to receive treatment that
might improve her condition.
Terri's family was not told of her move for over 24 hours, despite
a court order in place that requires her husband inform them of any
change in her medical condition. With the intervention of their lawyer,
they have since been informed that the bleeding stopped, but no cause
for it was identified. Terri is suffering from pneumonia and a urinary
tract infection, but neither complaint is considered serious.
Terri collapsed in 1990 under suspicious circumstances, and a bone
scan a year later revealed that she had suffered a history of trauma
that had resulted in broken bones all over her body, as well as damage
to her windpipe consistent with attempted strangulation. No definite
cause for the event was ever found, but Terri was profoundly disabled
by it, and remains so today. Her husband filed a malpractice case on
her behalf and she was awarded $700,000 for her medical care. However,
acting as her guardian, Terri's husband has spent over $400,000 of that
money on lawyers in an attempt to euthanize Terri, rather than using
the funds to treat or rehabilitate her.
On the same day Terri became ill, her family filed an emergency motion
for stay in the Florida supreme court, in an effort to keep Schiavo
from having Terri's feeding tube removed, thereby starving her to death,
before the court can review her case. The Schindler family is accusing
Judge George Greer of Pinellas Fla., who had previously allowed an attempt
to starve Terri, of extreme bias towards Terri's husband.
In part, this is because after reviewing videotape of Terri obviously
responding in a sentient way to various stimuli and following doctor's
directions to open her eyes, he still ruled that she was in a "permanent
vegetative state" and therefore could be allowed to die slowly and painfully
by starvation.
Judge Greer's ruling was eventually reversed, but only after Terri
had been denied nutrition and hydration for a period of time.
Although Schiavo seems more than eager to get rid of his wife, he refuses
to divorce her. Over $100,000 of Terri's malpractice settlement still
remains in her husband's control.