From the hospital’s website (
Who We Are ):
“At AdventHealth, Extending the Healing Ministry of Christ is our mission. It calls us to be His hands and feet in helping people feel whole. Our story is one of hope — one that strives to heal and restore the body, mind and spirit.
[…]
Our Christian mission, shared vision, common values and focus on whole-person health is our commitment to making communities healthier with a unified system: nearly 50 hospital campuses and hundreds of care sites in diverse markets throughout nine states.”
I point this out to say that the hospital was explicitly Christian in orientation, and to ask this: as such an institution, particularly one located in a state which (IMO) prides itself on protecting the religious beliefs of people/institutions, would AdventHealth have been obliged to respect a patient’s advance directive if it essentially said that no lifesaving measures should be taken if the patient was nearing the end of their natural life?
What I’m wondering is—if the hospital’s spiritual and professional mission was to preserve life at all stages and all costs, wouldn’t a patient’s advance directive that, er, directed the hospital to take actions that ran counter to this “mission” just have been quietly ignored? Imagine, for instance, if a pregnant woman was admitted with an advance directive that stated that if she was unconscious and needed lifesaving surgery, and a choice had to be made to save the life of the mother or the child, she wanted the doctors to save her life. In that scenario, a hospital that was strongly anti-abortion wouldn’t be bound to respect her wishes as expressed in her advance directive, would it?
If the hospital disregarding a patient’s AD was a possibility that the deceased man’s wife imagined could come to pass, I wonder if this fear might’ve provided her with a reason to take the terrible action that she did.