Druckschrift 
Death and euthanasia in Jewish law : essays and responsa / edited by Walter Jacob and Moshe Zemer
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CPR AND THE FRAIL ELDERLY Walter Jacob

QUESTION: When elderly patients in a nursing home or hospital are in need of cardio-pulmonary resuscitation is it advisable to initiate it among the frail elderly who are less likely to survive hospitalization subsequent to CPR than a younger person and who may even if they recover, be more frail and debilitated with a poorer quality of life? Should the patient or the official representative of the patient be able to indicate whether CPR should be initiated? What should the policy of long-term care institutions be in connection with Jewish patients? Should we make a distinction between patients who are likely to survive a year or more and those whose life span will be less?(Rabbi Lennard R. Thal, Los Angeles CA )*

ANSWER: Traditional Judaism has been very careful about judgments of life and death. In earlier times and at the present it remains difficult for the medical profession to predict the length of life. We have all seen cases in which the general prognosis is poor, but the spirit or physical condition of the patient enables that individual to survive considerable longer. Furthermore while some diseases rapidly take their toll among the elderly, others move much more slowly among them.

It is also virtually impossible to assess such matters as"the quality of life" and so Judaism has refrained from doing so. What might seem a very poor quality of life for some may be acceptable to others. In addition we must reckon with longer or shorter periods of depression which may strike such individuals either in the natural course of events or due to medication.

For these reasons and the general respect for life we have made no judgments on"quality of life" and would not consider that as a factor in instituting CPR or any other medical measures.

We should make a distinction between the frail elderly and a goses(a dying individual). Nothing needs to be done for someone who is clearly and obviously dying and whose death is close. At that stage we