Page Six Burn FOSTON (I) - People burned beyond hope are being asked at a Los Angeles hospital whe- ther they want doctors to keep them alive with last ditch meth- ods or let them die quietly. Most choose to die. I-or a few hours after their ijury, even badly burned pa- tients feel little pain and can think clearly. During this time, the doctors tell the patient how THE Mt(-HIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 11, ,19?7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, Auguaf Vt, 1977 ca-ses o. critically he is hurt and let him way they want," said Sharon givz directions. Imbus, coauthor of the report with other researchers at the THE PROGRAM, started hosnital. "People have a right the ee years ago at the Los An- to make their own decisions and geles Copunty - University of to know what's happening to Southern California Medical them," she said in an inter- Center, is described in the issue view. of the New England Journal of luring the past two years, 24 Meuicine that appears today. severely burned, adults who "We believe that people have ranged in age rom 19 to 90 a right to live and to die the wet e admitted to the hospital's live or die ADVERTISING IN DOESN'T COST IT PAYS ! YOU'RE READING THIS, AREN'T YOU? Display-764-0554 Classifieds-7640557 bur; center. Doctors checked medical records and found that no one whose burns and age matched the victim's had ever survived. WHEN GIVEN a choice of treatment, all but three of them decided they wanted only basic care and pain medicine. All 24 later died. In such cases, the center's most experienced doctor tells the patient of his condition. No family members are allowed in the room. The doctor "tries to assume the role of a compassionate friend who is willing to listen," the researchers wrote. "Hands are often held, and an effort is made to look deeply into the patient's eyes to perceive the unspoken questions that may lie there." MOST PATIENTS accept the seriousness of their situation. "The very frequent question -'Am I going to die?' - is answered truthfully by the statement, 'We cannot predict t1,a #Sh t lxa ^f" n 1cr f- in the past of your age and with your size of burn has ever survived this injury, with or without maximal treatment.'," the researchers wrote. Once the decision is made to die without a struggle, the patients become peaceful, the researchers said. "They then try to live their lives complete- ly and fully to the end, saying things that they must say to thoseimportant to them, mak- ig proper plans, preparations and apologies." THE MINORITY who want all that medical science can give them are put in the burn center's intensive care unit. The researchers told of two sisters, aged 68 and 70, who were burned in a car accident. The younger was burned over 92 per cent of her body and the older over 96 per cent. The younger, when told about her condition, replied: "Well, I never dreamed that life would be like this, but since we all have to 'go sometime, I'd like to go quietly and comfortably." THE OLDER sister, consult- ed separately, could not believe she was so badly injured. "I feel so good," she said. "Wouldn't I be hurting horrib- ly if I were going to die?" Finally, the woman refused refused full therapy but denied she was dying, The younger sister died sev- eral hours later, and the older died the next day. A ConienmpotaY Elizabethan Concer Classical Music ay r r nwWETSLEEPING BEAUTY LoooMEN SymphoAyKAR RAMPAL o lec utor's4.99 Sale! "''' GARRI CKI * ~OHLtSSON the pid u red k lbum I luS1 an1 m re are lnow WST MEE S EAN oni sa le for just ... 4.99 ' . Prices Good August t 1 thru Aug. 20 Beverly Sills ...kd some of the foremost names in 4(lassi( al-mlILsiC to your col lect io n-OSEVE OF CORNTH,, The Birds wO, havC h m ,. ICOPULETEree Botticelli Pictures Academy of St Matn- he-Fw ds c(IssiCal assortment of anyoni. Come see for yourself! TWO LOCATIONS IN ANN ARBOR 300 S State 1235Sn e sity 665-3679 668-9866 540 tEIBERTY Corner tiberty & MoynArd 662 5623