Here's the Skinny

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Washington DC
Anorexic woman weighing 69 pounds has a right to starve, court rules

By Samantha Schmidt November 22


The 69-pound woman has battled anorexia for the majority of her life. In her preschool dance classes, she compared the size of her thighs to other girls’ limbs, and when she was 13, she started purging.


Earlier this month, after spending nearly two years in a New Jersey psychiatric hospital, the 29-year-old woman with a bone density of a 92-year-old told a court that she refused to eat any food, and wished to enter palliative care instead, which focuses on the comfort of the seriously or terminally ill.


A Superior Court judge ruled Monday that she cannot be fed against her will, and it is in her best interest to be transferred to a palliative care unit.


In a 140-minute opinion delivered orally at the bench, and shaped by landmark court decisions on personal self-determination, Morris County Judge Paul Armstrong called the woman’s testimony, “forthright, responsive, knowing, intelligent, voluntary, steadfast and credible,” the Wall Street Journal reported. Therefore, he ruled, the woman, referred to only as A.G., has the mental capacity to choose not to accept nutrition.


The state, which runs the psychiatric hospital where A.G. resides, argued the woman is mentally ill due to depression, and that by approving the withdrawal of force-feeding the court would essentially be allowing her passive suicide, the Daily Record reported. Palliative care would simply provide drugs to numb her pain and ease her own death, wrote Deputy Attorney General Gene Rosenblum.


In court papers, A.G. has said she is prepared to die but also envisions living an independent life. The 5-foot-6-inch-tall woman said she believes any weight about 70 is too much for her, and force-feeding is an effort to make her fat, wrote Peggy Wright, a Daily Record reporter, in an earlier article.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...hp_rhp-morning-mix_mm-anorexia:homepage/story


Good work, judge. I firmly believe in upholding the right to be fatally crazy and/or stupid.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
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Alberta
Id have to know more about the clinical definition of anorexia but on the surface, it would seem the judge erred.
 

Mokkajava

Electoral Member
Nov 14, 2016
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Saskatchewan
Through reading the article, I am thinking that anorexia is an illness, and a constant battle for this woman for almost 20 years now. If treatment for depression and or mental illness are not helping her, what kind of life is she going to lead in a mental Institute being force fed and constantly feeling that those around her that she is in the care of are against her and her enemy.
If it is a battle against an illness she herself has no will to fight, what good do we do her as a society by forcing her to continue it? Isn't the judges ruling the most compassionate and human response in this case??
 

Remington1

Council Member
Jan 30, 2016
1,469
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Through reading the article, I am thinking that anorexia is an illness, and a constant battle for this woman for almost 20 years now. If treatment for depression and or mental illness are not helping her, what kind of life is she going to lead in a mental Institute being force fed and constantly feeling that those around her that she is in the care of are against her and her enemy.
If it is a battle against an illness she herself has no will to fight, what good do we do her as a society by forcing her to continue it? Isn't the judges ruling the most compassionate and human response in this case??
I agree with you, much more compassionate.