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June 21, 2009

Does A Cancer Patient Have The Right To Refuse Treatment Without Fearing Forced Treatment?

Filed under: Drugs — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 12:11 am

Lets just say “said person” is tired of being sick and tired of medication.

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20 Comments

  1. Yes.
    In fact its vest to refuse treatment from the mainstream meducal profession, and seek an alternative treatment. There are many cures available.
    Read this report.http://dgwa1.fortunecity.com/body/cancer…

    Comment by David W — June 21, 2009 @ 4:13 am

  2. If they are over 18.

    Comment by Disney Ang — June 21, 2009 @ 8:31 am

  3. A patient has the right to refuse ANY treatment. Living wills and advanced directives are also useful when planning how a patient would like to receive their care. In the event the patient is unable to voice their decisions on their treatment the living will and AD will be consulted.

    Comment by nosferat — June 21, 2009 @ 10:24 am

  4. yes thay do have the right to refuse treatment

    Comment by Kelly B — June 21, 2009 @ 4:00 pm

  5. yes they have the right to refuse treatment, and if they are in good mind they should fill out a living will at any hospital that states just what they want and dont want.

    Comment by Metal Band Discographies — June 21, 2009 @ 8:51 pm

  6. if the person is a minor than only their parents can refuse further treatments , but anyone over 18 can refuse any treatment for anything. if the cancer is terminal , i would say quit treatment and enjoy whats left of life. once we were told that my sons cancer was terminal he asked me if he could stop all treatments , i let him, he said if it wont cure him he just wanted to be left alone to do what he wanted . we took him everywhere he wanted to go and he died at home with me by his side.

    Comment by sindi — June 22, 2009 @ 2:20 am

  7. yes they have every right to refuse treatment and such, even those under 18 have some medical rights to refuse medicine and treatment.
    Please try to understand that chemo and radiation are very taxing on a person. My mother in law has been doing chemo off and on for 10 years trying to keep her cancer at bay, it’s amazing that she’ll go back for treatments when she knows the side effects.
    Support and love are the best things they need right now!

    Comment by the_grea — June 22, 2009 @ 3:51 am

  8. If the person is of the age of legal consent they can certainly refuse treatment and can sign a ‘living will’ that rejects ‘heroic efforts’, being hooked up to machines that keep them alive beyond the point that the body could sustain itself.

    Comment by Zia — June 22, 2009 @ 5:52 am

  9. you as a person and has his/her right mind can refuse any thing they wish. your not in a coma, speak up.

    Comment by mouse380 — June 22, 2009 @ 6:33 am

  10. Even people under the age of 18 can refuse any type of medical treatment, if a judge believes they aren’t being coerced.
    In the US, we have the right of self determination, that is to say, to decide to treat or not to treat our bodies.

    Comment by OK yeah well whatever — June 22, 2009 @ 12:47 pm

  11. if the person is over the age of 18 .. they have a right to refuse treatment…and i do no how hard going for all those treanments are .. and all the doctors appointments..

    Comment by purple — June 22, 2009 @ 12:49 pm

  12. If “said person” is over 18, and is not judged to be incompetent to make his/her own medical decisions, then he/she has the right to refuse treatment.

    Comment by Pangolin — June 22, 2009 @ 5:24 pm

  13. Yes, anyone of legal age can refuse treatment of any kind. In the case of a minor child, the parent or guardian has the right to refuse treatment but legal action could be taken if the medical professionals feel that refusal is not in the best interest of the child. Many times in the case of a terminal cancer the medical professionals involved are in full agreement with the patient and wish only to medicate so the patient is in relative comfort.

    Comment by Lynn K — June 22, 2009 @ 7:37 pm

  14. No, I don’t believe they can. Maybe if they are over age they can, but if they are under age they can’t. Consider the sixteen year old boy that, a few months ago, had to go through weeks of trials just to get his own treatment. His parents even had to deal with social services for child neglect when they were just supporting his decision. How sad is that??? Be strong, though. Go through anything to get freedom. I hate to assume that you live in the US, but if you do that is what this country is supposed to be so great for. We are free and should be free to make our own decisions. Do what you think is best!!!

    Comment by Mystic Twilight — June 22, 2009 @ 11:52 pm

  15. A month ago I would have said that you had the right
    to refuse treatment, but in the last month I have
    learned a new truth….
    I am currently in the Bahamas with my Mother who has
    Terminal Lung Cancer. There is a clinic here that has
    been in operation for over 30 years. We have been here
    for 4 of our 8 week stay, everyday is really neat. A
    lot of the patients stick around in the meeting room/
    waiting room to visit, and share stories and catch up.
    There were 40 people all talking and laughing, talking
    about cancer and life, the returning patients talk
    about how bad their cancer was 4, 8, 10 even 18 years
    ago when they started coming to the clinic, the cancer
    that has since disappeared. There is nothing dangerous
    or foreign to the treatment, just building up your
    immune system in a very effective manner. If you want
    to know more contact me or go to
    http://www.immunemedicine.com I cannot tell you how impressed
    I am with what I have seen and how my Mother has
    already improved.
    The stories I have heard from the other patients here
    about how they were treated by US medicine astound me.
    One lady went home to have a shunt put in her liver so
    she would be ok to come here, but they refused to put
    it in unless she agreed to do chemotherapy, is that
    what our country is about? Denying helpful procedures
    unless we agree to dangerous, toxic ones?
    Another lady developed diabetes as an affect of her
    cancer and required insulin. When she turned down
    their suggested treatment to come to the clinic, they
    refused to give her insulin.
    Yet another lady was denied a cat, pet or MRI scan
    after radiation to see her progress unless she agreed
    to their suggested continued treatment.
    They were not forced into treatment, but if they
    wanted needed medicine, scans or surgeries, they had
    to agree to the doctors chosen treatments.
    My grandmother had a blocked tear duct that was very
    annoying and painful, but could be taken care of with
    a simple surgery. The procedure was scheduled, then
    she found out she had terminal cancer with less than a
    year to live, so they would no longer perform the
    surgery because she was “dying anyway”. So she
    suffered, and her eye eventually sealed itself closed
    as a result and she had to live with that irritation
    until her last day.
    My Mom cracked a vertebrae as a result of her cancer
    so we went to see a neurosurgeon to see what needed to
    be done for it. He said “nothing” because she would
    die from the cancer anyway. Her oncologist had not
    labeled her a terminal at that point, so it was not
    his place to say such a thing let alone diagnose a
    disease he does not treat. I asked, what he would do
    for her to fix it (ie. surgery, etc) once/ if the
    cancer was gone and he refused to even hypothesize
    since there was “no hope for her.” (By the way she is
    doing quite well right now)
    I know some doctors think they are God, but who
    actually gave them the power to be God.
    I know that this does not happen at every clinic or
    hospital, but it is happening in our country and it is
    wrong. When did we start bartering with our health care
    decisions?
    I am proud to be an American but I think our
    health care system needs a serious moral overhaul.
    I have heard so many similar stories that it just
    makes me sick to think we can treat our own people
    this way in their time of need.

    Comment by Pentair Pool Filters — June 23, 2009 @ 4:54 am

  16. An adult patient with any illness-including cancer– may refuse treatment if they are in their right mind. if they are found to be incompetent someone else will be appointed through the court to take over the patients medical care.

    Comment by wild&fre — June 23, 2009 @ 5:53 am

  17. if the doctors have done all they can. i think the patient should be allowed to refuse treatment.

    Comment by Viviane T — June 23, 2009 @ 10:23 am

  18. I have been a cancer survivor for six years but the cancer has left behind scars that will never heal. I have no food passage or air passage. All I have is liquid feed ( but really high in protein etc and mantain a steady weight) through a tube called the PEG tube inserted directly into my stomach and breathe through a hole in my throat, which luckily I can put my thumb on it to control the air in and out to talk and I have a pretty good speech. Keeping in mind – I have not eaten a single meal in 6 years – not a drop of water and knowing I never will and then knowing I will never be able to breathe or talk normally and knowing that the cancer has resurfaced, do you think I will be willing to go through all the pains of medication ever again? No -.Not in this lifetime.
    To come directly to your question – as long as you are sound of mind noone can force you to take treatment. You may ask for pain killers to reduce the cancer pains but you do have the right to refuse treatment.

    Comment by livingon — June 23, 2009 @ 4:20 pm

  19. As long as you are over the age of eighteen.
    There was a case in the news a few months back about a sixteen-year-old boy named Abraham Cherrix who decided to stop chemotherapy with his parents’ blessing.
    To make a long story short, it went to court, and his parents were charged for neglecting his health. They were originally going to force him to submit to chemotherapy at gunpoint… known as “gunpoint medicine.”
    He ended up winning, sort of… the courts still have some say over his medical treatment, but he doesn’t have to take chemo anymore.
    As long as you’re over the age of eighteen and of a sound mind to make the decision, yes, you can refuse treatment. No doctor or hospital owns your body.

    Comment by xxandra — June 23, 2009 @ 10:42 pm

  20. If this person is over 18 and of sound mind they can sign A living will also a D.N.R (do not resuscitate) for as long as they can speak for them self but later when they can’t, family members need to respect their decision They can have comfort measures like pain meds. and breathing treatments ,Oxygen and choose to give up,they can also choose different treatments then the ones they have tried first.

    Comment by breezy — June 24, 2009 @ 5:06 am

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