Sun Hudson On March 15, 2005, six-month-old
infant Sun Hudson, who had a lethal congenital malformation, was one of the first children to have care withdrawn under the Texas Futile Treatment Law. Doctors demonstrated in the ethics committee reviews that keeping the infant on a respirator would only delay his inevitable death. Sun died shortly after his care was discontinued.
Tirhas Habtegiris In December 2005,
Tirhas Habtegiris, a young woman and legal immigrant from
Eritrea, was removed from a respirator. Habtegiris died from complications of incurable and untreatable cancer that had spread to her lungs. She died 16 minutes after the respirator was removed.
Andrea Clark In April 2006, relatives of 53-year-old Andrea Clark were given the 10-day notice under this act. She had reportedly signed a statement she did not wish to die and was cognizant, although having difficulties communicating while under heavy medication and after her brain was damaged by internal bleeding and the effects of heart disease. After publicity from both right and left political groups, St. Luke's hospital in Houston agreed to review the case again, eventually retracting the original decision this further review. Clark died on May 8, 2006, after an infection.
Emilio Lee Gonzales In March 2007, Children's Hospital of Austin gave the mother of 16-month-old Emilio Lee Gonzales the 10 day notice under this act. This child suffered from
Leigh's disease, an invariably fatal, progressive illness which eventually destroys all nerve function and thereby prevents breathing, swallowing, coughing, or any intentional or reflex movement. Joshua Carden, an attorney for the Gonzales family, reported that the family had made a "unified decision" to keep the child alive through artificial means, which at the time of the court dispute included constant use of a ventilator machine, pumping food and water into his body, and frequent suctioning fluids out of his lungs, even though the family was aware that the child would not recover. On March 12, 2007, the hospital ethics committee set a date of March 23 for removing Gonzales from his respirator. Lawyers representing Gonzales' mother Catarina filed for a restraining order on March 20 to allow the family more time to locate another facility willing to accept Gonzales. Later that evening, the hospital agreed to postpone removal of the respirator until April 10. On April 4, lawyers for Catarina Gonzales challenged the constitutionality of the ADA in Federal court, saying that it violated Emilio Gonzales' 1st and 14th Amendment rights. However, on April 6, federal judge
Sam Sparks declined to intervene and sent the matter back to state court. As of April 9, over 30 hospitals nationwide had refused to accept Emilio as a transfer patient. He died at the hospital from the disease on Saturday, May 19, 2007, at the age of 19 months. He spent a total of five months on a mechanical respirator at the hospital before his death.
Other cases Although there is much press about these cases, due to the lack of a reporting clause in the current statute, there is little information on how often these cases occur. Dr. Robert Fine, director of the Office of Clinical Ethics for the Baylor Health Care System says he collected five years' worth of information from eleven large hospitals in Texas and two years' worth of data from five other large hospitals in the state. According to Fine's data, the hospitals surveyed held 2,922 ethics committee consultations, 974 of which concerned medical futility cases. From those 974 consultations, the hospitals issued 65 letters stating agreement with the attending physicians that treatment should be withdrawn, Fine says. But he says the hospitals actually withdrew treatment in only 27 of the cases, while 22 patients died receiving treatment as they awaited transfers. ==Support==