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Well, it looks like that scenario did indeed came sooner rather than later. The LaGrange (Ga) Daily News is reporting on another story where a family is desperately trying to save a 81-year old woman's life after she had her feeding tube taken out. According to her nephew, Kenneth Mullinax, Mae Magourik hasn't eaten or received fluids since March 28th, and the hospice is keeping her sedated on morphine and ativan. There's a problem, however (from World Net Daily):
So, Magourik is not terminally ill, and she isn't in a persistent vegetative state, as Schiavo was said to be in. Both World Net Daily and the LaGrange Daily News reports that she does have a living will, that specificially states she can only be "withheld of norishment if she is in a coma or a persistent vegetative state". WND reports she does not suffer from demetia or any other mental condition either.
The person trying to end Magourik's life is her granddaughter, Beth Gaddy, who had been taking care of her for 10 years. When Magourik suffered the aorta dissection, she was treated at LaGrange Hospital. Days later, Gaddy told hospital officials she had power of attorney, and released Magourik from the hospital and admitted her to Hospice-LaGrange.
The "Straight Up With Sherri" blog did a little research on the hospice, and found some information on the head of the hospice, Cathy Wiggins:
In other words, this is a place to drop your relatives off to die. And this is precisely why I would never want to be placed in one of those rest homes or hospices.
My mom is an assistance living aid, and recently helped one of her patients move back from North Carolina to California. However, the family was told to leave the patient's husband there, because they felt he wasn't capable of making the trip. My mom opposed it, and advised them to make arrangements to take her husband anyway. Why? Because with no family in NC and no one to check up on him, he's just sitting there waiting to die. I'm doing some research into Wiggins myself as I create this post, and this is what I found: So yeah; it's a death ward. I found this quite interesting as well: So, if Gaddy was coming out of pocket, she probably wasn't paying much. Now here's the dirty part; Gaddy found out that she only had power of attorney of Margourik's finances, not custodial arrangements. However, LaGrange Hospital transferred Margouik to LaGrange Hospice anyway. The hospice's legal counsel informed Mullinax that his wife, Ruth and Margouik's brother, A.B. McLeod, were the custodians since they were next-of-kin. But when they travelled to Georgia to make travel arrangements to have her sent to Alabama, Gaddy went down to the county courthouse, received an emergency guardianship for the weekend, and had her feeding tube taken out that same day. Only the court can order for her tube to be reinserted. Based on the evidence given, I'm sure Margourik has been declared a ward of the court. If she has, what explanation has the judge given to not place the tube back in? After all the hoopla over the Schiavo case and the fact that she has a living will, you'd think the judge would err on the side of caution. Hopefully I'll have some more information on this over the weekend. |
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