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As a retired physician, I must take strong exception to the essay in Wednesday's paper from Lisa Swanson ("In medical crisis, family needs support, not punishment," Opinion Exchange). Her questions regarding length of life vs. quality of life are valid. When people with life-threatening disease are facing this issue, most physicians respect the autonomy of their patients. We inform and advise, based on our best understanding of our best science. If the patient decides otherwise, we are ethically obliged to accept that. And Swanson's personal experience ("I have lived with a chronic illness for over 30 years") must be respected — even though her negative generalizations about physicians are quite apparent ("Rarely have doctors discussed side effects ... . Rarely do they cheer when I tell them diet and mindfulness meditation have changed my condition.")
But getting back to autonomy, that's the piece missing from Swanson's essay. For better or worse, our society protects children and our community from certain life challenges and experiences. For instance, we don't let 5-year-olds drive cars or vote. Likewise, most objective adults recognize that minors lack the maturity to deal with life-or-death decisions that affect themselves. So, the goal with Keaton Peck ("Chemo refusal brings parental rights fight," May 24) is not to foist medical treatment against the wishes of the parents. The goal is — so to speak — to keep him alive, not just because of our respect for life, but to allow him to attain legal authority to make his own decision as to whether he wishes to accept the risks of conventional care or pursue the risks of unproven therapy.
Hopefully, as medicine progresses, conventional care for patients like Peck will improve. Hopefully, the success rate will be greater and the complication rate less. Then, parents such as Peck's won't have to agonize over choosing the lesser of two evils for their underage child.
Richard Masur, Minneapolis
POLITICAL LIES, TRUTHS
Try asking Trump a question longer than a couple words
Bruce Peterson's column ("Reject political lies … but hear the truths they reveal," Opinion Exchange, May 29) described questions he wished moderator Kaitlan Collins had asked former President Donald Trump during the recent CNN town hall. One started with, "Mr. President, you keep saying the election was stolen …" — at which point Trump would have talked over her about how it was the greatest travesty in American history, and she never would have had a chance to finish her complex question about how he would restore faith to those who felt their political power had been stolen by changing demographics, identity politics, Wall Street, etc., etc.
Peterson opined that a second question could have been asked about E. Jean Carroll's jury verdict and the changing role of women in society, the Me Too movement, affording women protection and full equality, etc., etc.