Just a question. But why do some feel as though a person should be let go in a situation such as this, assuming they are not in a state of suffering?
Keeping the patient in a suspended state between brain death and actual death keeps the family in a suspended state as well. The other children in the family take a back seat. Normal life activities are set aside. Normal, healthy processing and grieving don't occur typically until actual death takes place. My Dad spent six weeks in in- home hospice last Fall. There was minimal meaningful interaction. It was awful, knowing he was alive, but had "left the building."