What happened to OC? - CLOSED Carnage?!
Sign in to follow this  
Followers 0
DiSiAC

Can Connecticut Force A Teenage Girl To Undergo Chemotherapy?

26 posts in this topic

142073784999553.jpg

 

A 17-year-old Connecticut girl recently diagnosed with cancer has been removed from her home after refusing to undergo chemotherapy.

 

The girl, named Cassandra, is now in the custody of child welfare authorities and is being forced to undergo cancer treatment. The state Supreme Court is taking up her case Thursday to weigh whether she's mature enough to make her own medical decisions.

 

Cassandra is Jackie Fortin's only child. Fortin has been a single mother for Cassandra's entire life. Until last month, they lived together in Windsor Locks, Conn. Fortin says this is the first time they've been separated.

 

"Nobody, whether it's her age or an adult, should ever have to go through this by herself," she says.

 

For the past month, her daughter has been held at a local hospital, undergoing chemotherapy treatment against her wishes. A court gave the state Department of Children and Families temporary custody of Cassandra, as well as the authority to make medical decisions for the teen, after doctors reported Fortin for neglect. Court papers document missed appointments and arguments with doctors over her daughter's diagnosis.

 

But Fortin says it's her daughter's right to refuse chemotherapy, saying she doesn't want to poison her body.

"This is not about death," Fortin says. "My daughter is not going to die. This is about, 'This is my body, my choice, and let me decide.' "

 

But Cassandra's doctors say that without treatment, she will die. They testified in previous hearings that Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymph system, is lethal without the recommended treatment. With treatment, she has an 85 percent chance of survival.

 

Kristina Stevens, an administrator with Connecticut's DCF, says the doctors' medical opinions prompted the state to get involved.

 

"We had the benefit of experts who could tell us with great clarity if in fact we don't do something, if the system doesn't react and respond, this child will die," Stevens says.

 

Cassandra is just eight months away from turning 18. Joshua Michtom, one of her attorneys, says this adds another complicated layer to the case.

"The general rule for adults is that you can say no to treatment no matter how life-saving it may be," Michtom says. "You can say no even to helpful treatment. If she were 18, no matter what anyone said, it would be her choice to make."

 

Her attorneys say maturity doesn't just develop at a certain age. They'll argue that Connecticut should adopt the mature minor doctrine, which allows courts to consider evidence on whether a teen is competent to make health care decisions.

 

This is the first time a case like this has come up in Connecticut, but other states have considered the question. Michtom points to Illinois and Maine as two states where courts decided that even though teenagers who weren't yet 18 had refused treatment or didn't want to be kept alive artificially, there was evidence to show they were mature enough when they conveyed their wishes.

 

That's Fortin's hope for her daughter. She says the state has ripped apart a normal family and turned their lives into a nightmare.

 

"I've never been in the system, never had a problem, nothing," Fortin says. "And all of a sudden we have a medical situation and now I'm being deemed as the bad mother."

 

Connecticut's Supreme Court has promised to rule quickly, but that doesn't mean the justices will decide whether Cassandra can refuse life-saving treatments.

 

Instead, it could send her case back to a lower court, giving her attorneys a chance to call on mental health experts to prove the teen is competent to make her own medical decisions.

Otherwise, she'll remain in DCF custody and continue treatment until at least September. That's when she turns 18.

 

Source


If it flies, floats, or fucks, rent it.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Tiddy-bits:

Holy shit.

I can't even find the words for this one. Nanny state, anyone?


Umh7x1l.gif

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Can they? No shit, they are. 

 

Who going to stop them? No one. 

 

Glad we have everyone posting solidarity crap all over social media for #Charlie_Hebdo and #Freedom_of_press. That'll show 'em!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

They are pretty much reducing her to a number, her age, and determining how many basic rights she gets based on that number. If you are at least 18 years old, you can smoke, gamble, do jury, and deny life-saving medical care. If you are 16 or 17, you can get sentenced to death in some states, but you can not deny life-saving medical care.

Edited by 002

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I wonder who's paying for it?

 

You and I. 

They are pretty much reducing her to a number, her age, and determining how many basic rights she gets based on that number. If you are at least 18 years old, you can smoke, gamble, do jury, and deny life-saving medical care. If you are 16 or 17, you can get sentenced to death in some states, but you can not deny life-saving medical care.

 

You can voluntary serve in the Armed Forces Reserves at 17.

Kavawuvi, NeX and Floofies like this

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

That's very generous of you, good job!

 

What would have made it even better is if I'd willingly and happily given, rather than being forced to take food out of my own child's mouth. 

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

There's got to be more to this than what's posted in the media, always is.

How does the parent gain from her daughters passing? Does she? Could she sue?

Sounds like a typical mother daughter scenario but what is the quality of their living, what beliefs do they follow?

There's some wacked out people out there, just saying.

Where's the will to live?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

There's got to be more to this than what's posted in the media, always is.

How does the parent gain from her daughters passing? Does she? Could she sue?

Sounds like a typical mother daughter scenario but what is the quality of their living, what beliefs do they follow?

There's some wacked out people out there, just saying.

Where's the will to live?

 

Or it could simply be the woman wants to make her own decisions. It doesn't matter what they believe and quality of living is an excuse. 

 

Not everyone has the same ideas or expectations for life. 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Sign in to follow this  
Followers 0
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.