nutrition - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 27 Jul 2015 01:51:56 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg nutrition - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Bioethics storm over hydration and nutrition of patient https://cathnews.co.nz/2015/07/28/bioethics-storm-over-hydration-and-nutrition-of-patient/ Mon, 27 Jul 2015 19:11:42 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=74571

Doctors at a French hospital have decided not withdraw hydration and nutrition from a quadriplegic man who has been at the centre of a bioethical debate. Vincent Lambert became a quadriplegic and was left in a comatose state after a motorcycle accident in 2008. In 2013, Lambert's wife and six of his eight siblings asked Read more

Bioethics storm over hydration and nutrition of patient... Read more]]>
Doctors at a French hospital have decided not withdraw hydration and nutrition from a quadriplegic man who has been at the centre of a bioethical debate.

Vincent Lambert became a quadriplegic and was left in a comatose state after a motorcycle accident in 2008.

In 2013, Lambert's wife and six of his eight siblings asked courts to rule that his hydration and nutrition be disconnected.

In response, his parents, who are Catholics, initiated a legal fight to protect their son's life.

The case went all the way to the European Court of Human Rights, which approved the removal of hydration and nutrition.

French end of life law allows the suspension of treatment in futile cases.

The Catholic Church in France has protested that Lambert is not undergoing any treatment, but is simply receiving food and water via a feeding tube.

He is not in a vegetative state as such, given that his body reacts to certain stimuli and is able to feel pain.

The hospital in Reims said it did not intend to switch off the machine sustaining the patient.

"This procedure cannot go ahead given the current lack of calm and certainty," doctors explained.

They referred the issue to the health ministry last Thursday.

Doctors had reportedly feared that there could be plot by pro-life activists to abduct Lambert from the hospital and kidnap members of his medical team.

Lambert's nephew said the doctors' decision to continue hydration and nutrition was due to intimidation.

Public prosecutors have been asked to look at the case.

The row over Vincent Lambert is similar to a legal fight over Terri Schiavo, a Florida woman who suffered brain damage in 1990 and was left in a vegetative state.

Eventually her husband won a protracted court case to have her feeding tube removed and she died in 2005.

Sources

Bioethics storm over hydration and nutrition of patient]]>
74571
India's quest to end world hunger https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/06/20/indias-quest-end-world-hunger/ Thu, 19 Jun 2014 19:18:08 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=59372

It may not make his family wealthy, but Devran Mankar is still grateful for the pearl millet variety called Dhanshakti (meaning "prosperity and strength") he has recently begun growing in his small field in the state of Maharashtra, in western India. "Since eating this pearl millet, the children are rarely ill," raves Mankar, a slim man Read more

India's quest to end world hunger... Read more]]>
It may not make his family wealthy, but Devran Mankar is still grateful for the pearl millet variety called Dhanshakti (meaning "prosperity and strength") he has recently begun growing in his small field in the state of Maharashtra, in western India.

"Since eating this pearl millet, the children are rarely ill," raves Mankar, a slim man with a gray beard, worn clothing and gold-rimmed glasses.

Mankar and his family are participating in a large-scale nutrition experiment.

He is one of about 30,000 small farmers growing the variety, which has unusually high levels of iron and zinc — Indian researchers bred the plant to contain large amounts of these elements in a process they call "biofortification."

The grain is very nutritional," says the Indian farmer, as his granddaughter Kavya jumps up and down in his lap. It's also delicious, he adds. "Even the cattle like the pearl millet."

Mankar's field on the outskirts of the village of Vadgaon Kashimbe is barely 100 meters (328 feet) wide and 40 meters long.

The grain will be ripe in a month, and unless there is a hailstorm — may Ganesha, the elephant god, prevent that from happening — he will harvest about 350 kilograms of pearl millet, says the farmer. It's enough for half a year.

The goal of the project, initiated by the food aid organisation Harvest Plus, is to prevent farmers like Mankar and their families from going hungry in the future.

In fact, the Dhanshakti pearl millet is part of a new "Green Revolution" with which biologists and nutrition experts hope to liberate the world from hunger and malnutrition. Continue reading.

Source: Spiegel Online

Image: AFP

India's quest to end world hunger]]>
59372
UK launches inquiry into Liverpool Care Pathway https://cathnews.co.nz/2012/11/30/uk-launches-inquiry-into-liverpool-care-pathway/ Thu, 29 Nov 2012 18:30:11 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=37197

The British Government has announced an independent review of an end-of-life protocol used in New Zealand hospitals, following allegations that it is being used as a means of euthanasia for the terminally ill. The inquiry will focus on the Liverpool Care Pathway, designed to ease the suffering of patients in their last hours or days Read more

UK launches inquiry into Liverpool Care Pathway... Read more]]>
The British Government has announced an independent review of an end-of-life protocol used in New Zealand hospitals, following allegations that it is being used as a means of euthanasia for the terminally ill.

The inquiry will focus on the Liverpool Care Pathway, designed to ease the suffering of patients in their last hours or days of life.

The pathway often involves sedation and the withdrawal of life-prolonging drugs, nutrition and hydration.

Critics say people are being put on it without their relatives being informed, and that the pathway is being used to hasten the deaths of patients who are not imminently dying.

When Norman Lamb, Britain's Care and Support Minister, announced the review, he said consider whether payments to hospitals for meeting targets on their use of the pathway might have led to "bad decisions or practice".

The Daily Telegraph has revealed that six out of 10 National Health Service hospital trusts had received payments totalling $NZ23 million or more for attaining these goals. In some hospitals more than half of all dying patients were put on the pathway

Department of Health officials have insisted that the payments are to ensure that patients are "treated with dignity" as they die — and many doctors argue that the widespread adoption of the Liverpool Care Pathway has led to improved care for the dying.

"It is clear that everyone wants their loved ones' final hours of life to be as pain-free and dignified as possible, and the Liverpool Care Pathway is an important part of achieving this aim," Mr Lamb said.

"However as we have seen, there have been too many cases where patients were put on the pathway without a proper explanation or their families being involved. This is simply unacceptable."

The Catholic Communications Network said Archbishop Peter Smith of Southwark, chairman of the English and Welsh bishops' Department for Christian Responsibility and Citizenship, welcomed the review.

It said Archbishop Smith had passed on "specific concerns raised with him by some clinicians" and had called for such an inquiry in a letter to the government in September.

Sources:

Catholic News Service

The Telegraph

Image: The Spectator

UK launches inquiry into Liverpool Care Pathway]]>
37197