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新视野大学英语读写教程第三册unit5-b Decisions of the Heart

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Section (B)

Decisions of the Heart


Assume for a moment that your 90-year-old mother has recently suffered a stroke. She is right-handed, and now she is unable to move her right arm and leg — they are worthless to her. She can make sounds, but she can't make herself understood.The condition has lasted two months and since there has been no sign of improvement, the doctor tells you she will never get significantly better. Until this time your mother has always been an active,independent person who lived on her own. Now she is completely dependent on others.


Next, x-rays show your mother has a lung infection — a frequent problem with stroke patients. The doctor then calls you, her only surviving relative."We can treat the infection with drugs and she'll probably get better in a week," he says. "When I say better, I mean she'll go on as she has — until some other germ comes along. Or I can deny her the
medicine, in which case she'll probably die in three or four days. We can make those days comfortable by giving her painkillers and sleeping pills. Which course do you want me to follow?"


Tough question, isn't it? On the one hand, you cannot bear to see your once vigorous mother living the painful, limited life to which the stroke has condemned her. On the other hand, you hate to be the one to decide to let nature take its course.I'll tell you which choice I would make in this theoretical situation. I'd say, "Don't give her anything to
fight the infection. Keep her comfortable and let's see what happens; maybe she'll fight off the infection on her own and if she doesn't, she'll die a peaceful death. I don't want to be responsible for condemning my mother to a living hell."


I can make this decision because I've gone down this road with patients many times. Recently I operated in vain on an eighty -year-old woman with cancer of the liver ... There was nothing I could do to relieve the problems the cancer had caused. She was an intelligent woman, without any close relatives, and a couple of days after the operation I sat down with her and explained the situation.


"I can give you some anti-cancer drugs," I said, "but they will make you sick and cannot cure you.Similarly, I can give you fluids through a needle in your arm, which will keep you fed as your appetite slips away; the fluids might add a week or two to your life. Or I can withdraw all other treatment and just give you a vitamin pill, and we can see what happens. Personally, my recommendation would be the last choice. I'll keep you comfortable, and we'll see what happens."


The patient elected to follow my advice and died peacefully, pain free, a fortnight later.Sometimes such a transparent decision is more difficult to come by. Recently I had a patient who suffered a severe stroke. He was completely unable to move and couldn't swallow anything. We gave him fluids for the first two weeks and then fed him through a tube which passed through his nose into his stomach.


After three weeks he was still completely unconscious, and the tube caused him to have a constant,painful sore throat ... I talked to his four grown children and told them I thought we should insert a tube directly into his stomach through a small hole so he could be fed without so much pain. I also told them, "I can remove the tube and just let him swallow whatever he can. Chances are he won't live long,but he won't be in pain." No one wanted to take the responsibility for permitting an operation, yet no one would give permission to stop feeding the patient entirely.


As a result, the poor man continued on for nearly three more months with a painful throat and frequent bleeding caused by sores in the mouth. He died of a major infection - a sad way to die.So what should responsible persons do when confronted with the necessity of such an enormous decision?What it all comes down to is common sense. For the 30 years I have been a doctor, and for hundreds of years before that, doctors and families have been quietly cooperating to decide what is best for a patient in the final phase of an illness.


In 95 percent of the cases a sympathetic, reasonable decision can be made after appropriate discussion. In 5 percent of cases where such a judgment cannot immediately be reached, the proper decision will become apparent after a few days or weeks of basic treatment, observing the patient's progress.


Let me sound one note of warning. Neither families nor doctors like to make life-death decisions. But there is no question that if either party insists on bringing in a so-called "neutral"; third party (usually some representative of the state or legal profession), not only will the process take longer, in many instances it will be more arbitrary and less sympathetic.


What we are trying to avoid is neutrality; the only people with any qualification to decide are those who know the patient intimately and can put his or her interests first. If there's one place from which the interference of lawyers and government officials should be barred, it's from the rooms of critically ill patients.

Words: 902

New Words

 stroke n. 1.中风 2.击,打,敲 vt. 抚摸
 worthless a. 无价值的,没有用处的
 dependent a. 1.依赖的,依靠的 2.取决于... ...的
 x-ray n. 1. [C] X光照片 2. [C] X射线; X光
■infection n. 1.传染病 2.传染,感染
 germ n. 1.微生物,病菌,细菌 2.萌芽,起源
 deny vt. 1.拒绝给予,拒绝……的要求 2.不承认,否认
 condemn vt. 1.迫使……陷于不幸的境地 2.批评,谴责 3.判……刑,给……定罪
 theoretical a. 1.理论(上)的,假设的,推理的 2.根据理论(而非实践)的
 hell n. 1.地狱 2.极不愉快的经历(或事) 3.用以表示愤怒或惊讶,或用以加强语气
 vain a. 1.不成功的,无效的,没有意义的 2.自负的,虚荣的
 eighty num. 八十
 liver n. [C, U] 肝
 relieve vt. 1.减轻,解除(痛苦、疾病等) 2.救济,援助
 similarly ad. 也; 同样地, 类似地
 withdraw vt. 收回,撤消,撤退 vi. 缩回,退出,撤退
 recommendation n. 1.建议,忠告 2.推荐,介绍
 elect vt. 1.选择,决定 2.选举
 fortnight n. 十四天,两星期
 transparent a. 1.明显的,无疑的 2.透明的
 tube n. 1.管,软管 2.(伦敦的)地下铁道
 throat n. 咽喉,喉咙,嗓子
 insert vt. 插入,嵌进
 permission n. 许可,准许,同意
 necessity n. 1.必要性,需要 2.必需品
 cooperate vi. 合作,协作,配合
 phase n. 阶段,时期 vt. 分期计划,按阶段执行
 sympathetic a. 1.有同情心的,表示同情的,同感的 2.表示好感或赞同的
 so-called a. 所谓的,号称的
 neutral a. 1.中立的 2.(化学)中性的
 profession n. 1.(尤指需要特殊训练或专门知识的)职业 2.行业,(某一)职业界 3.声明,表白
 arbitrary a. 任意的,武断的;专断的
 qualification n. 1.能力,条件;合格性 2.资格,资历
 intimate a. 1.亲近的,亲密的 2.私人的,秘密的 vt. 暗示,提示
 intimately ad. 亲密地,私下地
 interference n. 干涉,干预
 bar vt. 1.阻止,不许 2.阻碍,阻塞 n. 酒吧,吧台

Phrases and Expressions

 make oneself understood 使他人明白自己的意思,说清楚自己的意思
 on one's own 单独,独自 独立地
 be dependent on 依赖,依靠
 treat with 以... ...治疗,用... ...治病
 go on (情况、形势、状态等)持续不变
 come along 到达,出现
 on the one hand …on the other hand… 一方面... ...另一方面... ...
 condemn sb. to sth. 使某人做不愿做的事,把某人逼入某种状态
 take its course 任其自然发展,按常规进行
 fight off 抵抗,击退,避开
 be responsible for 对……负有责任
 in vain 无结果地,无用地
 come by 努力获得
 chances are (that…) 可能
 confront with 使面对(问题、挑战等)
 die of 死于
 come down to 归结为,实质上是
 bar… from 禁止某人做某事

    充满爱心的决策
    假设一下你那90岁的母亲最近中了风。 她是个右撇子,如今却不能移动她的右胳膊右腿——对她而言,它们就没有用了。 她虽然还可以发出声音,却无法让人明白她的意思。
    这种状况持续了两个月,因为一直没有好转的迹象,医生告诉你她可能永远也不能完全康复了。 在此之前,你的母亲一直健康活跃,生活自理,独自居住。 如今她却要完全依赖他人了。
    而后,X光透视显示,你母亲肺部受到感染,这是中风病人的常见病症。 于是医生给你打电话,因为你是她惟一在世的亲人。
    "我们可以用药物治疗感染,一周后她可能会好起来," 他说,"我说‘好起来’,是指她会保持她感染前的状况——直到出现某种别的病菌。 或者,我可以停止给她用药,这样一来,她可能三四天后就会去世。 我们可以把这几天弄得舒服些,办法是给她用止疼片和安眠药。 你希望我采用哪一种方法?"
    这是个棘手的问题,对不对? 一方面,你不忍心看着自己一度精力充沛的母亲活在因中风而变得痛苦而有限的生命里。 另一方面,你又讨厌做一个决定听任母亲的病情自然发展的人。
    我来告诉你我在这种情况下会怎么做。 我会说:"不要给她服用任何抗感染的药物了。 要让她舒服,然后看看会发生什么事。 也许她会自己克服感染。如果不能,那她也会死得安详。 我不愿担当硬让自己的母亲生活在地狱里的责任。"
    我之所以能做出这样的决定,是因为我多次碰到过这样的病人。 最近,我给一位80岁的患肝癌的妇女动过手术,但没有成效。 对缓解癌症导致的病变我无计可施。 她是个聪明女人,没有任何直系亲属。手术后几天,我坐在她身边给她解释了当时的情形。
    "我可以给你用一些抗癌药," 我说,"但是它们会让你难受,而且还治不好你。 同样,我也可以在你手臂上插上针管,通过它给你输液,这可以让你保持进食,因为你的食欲会渐渐消退;输液可能让你的生命延长一至二周。 或者,我可以撤消所有的治疗,只给你吃维他命,然后再看看有什么效果。 我个人建议你选最后一种方案。 我会让你没有痛苦,然后再看看会发生什么事。"
    病人选择了听从我的建议。两周后,她安详地、毫无痛苦地离世了。
    而有时,要得到如此显而易见的决定却很困难。 最近,我有一个病人严重中风。 他完全动弹不得,而且不能吞咽任何东西。 头两个礼拜我们给他输液,后来又通过一根导管将食物从他的鼻子输送到他的胃里。
    三周后,他依旧昏迷不醒,而导管使他的喉咙经常疼痛。 我与他的四个成年孩子商量,告诉他们我认为该把一根导管通过一个小洞直接插进他的胃里,这样喂食他就不会那么痛苦。 我还告诉他们说:"我可以把导管拿掉,就让他吃些他能吃得下的东西。 有可能他活不长久,但他不会太痛苦。" 没有人愿意承担允许施行手术的责任,然而也没有人愿意允许完全停止给病人进食。
    结果,可怜的老人又多活了近三个月,喉咙依然疼痛不已,嘴里也因灼痛而经常出血。 他死于严重感染——一种令人悲痛的死法。
    那么,作为负责任的人,在需要做出这样大的决定时该怎么办呢?
    归根到底是个常识问题。 在我行医的30年里,以及在这之前的数百年里,医生和病人家属一直合作默契,共同决定在疾病的最后阶段怎么做才对病人最好。
    有95%的病例,在恰当磋商之后,都能做出人道而合理的决定。 另外的5%不能立即达成这样的决议。遇上这种病例,做上几天或数周的基本治疗,观察病人的进展之后,正确的决定就一目了然了。
    在此我警告一句。 不论是家属还是医生,他们都不愿做出生死攸关的决定。 可是毫无疑问,如果任何一方坚持要有所谓 "中立"的第三方(通常是政府代表或者职业律师)介入,那不但会拖长决策过程,而且在很多时候,决策还会更加武断、更加不人道。
    我们试图避免的就是中立。惟一有权做出决定的,是那些非常熟悉病人的人,能将病人的利益放在首位的人。 如果有一个地方应该禁止律师和政府官员的干涉,那就是危在旦夕的病人的房间。
 

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