| Literature DB >> 32284707 |
Afshan Mohiuddin1,2, Mehrunisha Suleman3, Shoaib Rasheed4, Aasim I Padela1,5,6.
Abstract
When it is ethically justifiable to stop medical treatment? For many Muslim patients, families, and clinicians this ethical question remains a challenging one as Islamic ethico-legal guidance on such matters remains scattered and difficult to interpret. In light of this gap, we conducted a systematic literature review to aggregate rulings from Islamic jurists and juridical councils on whether, and when, it is permitted to withdraw and/or withhold life-sustaining care. A total of 16 fatwās were found, 8 of which were single-author rulings, and 8 represented the collective view of a juridical council. The fatwās are similar in that nearly all judge that Islamic law, provided certain conditions are met, permits abstaining from life-sustaining treatment. Notably, the justifying conditions appear to rely on physician assessment of the clinical prognosis. The fatwās differ when it comes to what conditions justify withdrawing or withholding life- sustaining care. Our analyses suggest that while notions of futility greatly impact the bioethical discourse regarding with holding and/or withdrawal of treatment, the conceptualization of futility lacks nuance. Therefore, clinicians, Islamic jurists, and bioethicists need to come together in order to unify a conception of medical futility and relate it to the ethics of withholding and/or withdrawal of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Fatwa; Islam Muslim; Withholding; end of life care; withdrawal
Year: 2020 PMID: 32284707 PMCID: PMC7144300 DOI: 10.1080/11287462.2020.1736243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Bioeth ISSN: 1128-7462
Figure 1.Search strategy for Sunni fatwās of muftīs/faqīhs and Muslim fiqh councils
Decisions of organisations on withholding and withdrawal of medical care.
| Year | Organisation | Form of decision | When can care be withheld? | When can care be withdrawn? | Type of medical care in question | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1977 | Council of the Islamic Jurisprudence Academy of Muslim World League | International, based in Saudi Arabia | – | Brain Death | Life-support equipment | |
| 1981 | IOMS (Islamic Organization of Medical Sciences) Islamic Conference | International, represents diverse Islamic schools of law and theology | Code of Ethics | Recommended if useless; allows treatment abatement for PVS (persistent vegetative state) too | If futile/useless, brain dead (1985); allows treatment abatement for PVS too | Medical treatment |
| 1986 | OIC-IFA | International, represents diverse Islamic schools of law and theology | – | Inevitable death or brain death | ||
| 1989 | Saudi Committee for | Juridical council based in Saudi Arabia | If 3 physicians can attest to either: patient unfit for resuscitation, illness unresponsive to treatment and death certain, incapacitated pt or state of mental inactivity, untreatable brain damage, resuscitation would be inappropriate/ineffective | – | Resuscitation (“R” in DNR) | |
| 1999 | Jamiatul Ulama | Council of Islamic scholars based in South-Africa | If no chance of survival* | – | Life-support | |
| 2010 | Islamic | New Delhi | When physicians are hopeful that the patient's natural respiratory system will be restored, but the patient or relatives do not have the assets to afford continuation If physicians have “lost hope for his life,” the relatives may ask for the removal | Artificial respirator system | ||
| ECFR (European Council for | Led by Shaykh Yusuf Qaradawi | – | Loss of | Artificial resuscitation apparatus | ||
| Darul Uloom Zakariyya | Religious school in South-Africa with a | – | Patient cannot stay alive without it (ventilator) | Respirator | ||
| Madrasah Inaamiyyah | Religious school in South-Africa with a | No chance of survival | Unclear. “Ruling of withdrawal of respirator depends on how the respirator is regarded (an act or an omission).” | Medical treatment |
Conditions justifying the withholding of medical care.
| Conditions justifying the withholding of medical care | Category of futility | |
|---|---|---|
| “Useless” care | IOMS, Yusuf al-Qaradawi | |
| Terminally ill/ | Madrasah In’aamiyyah, Jamiatul Ulama | Imminent Demise/Lethal Condition |
| Patient unfit for resuscitation, illness unresponsive to treatment and death certain, incapacitated patient or state of mental inactivity, untreatable brain damage, resuscitation would be inappropriate/ineffective | Saudi Committee for | Imminent Demise/Lethal Condition |
Decisions of Jurists on withholding and withdrawal of medical care.
| Jurist | Year of birth, Country of origin/work | Can care be withheld? | Can care be withdrawn? | Care in question | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hani al-Jubayr | Saudi Arabia | Islamic scholar for Jeddah Supreme Court. | No | |||
| 2004 | Muhammad bin Adam al-Kawthari | UK, 1976 | Darul Iftaa, Leicester UK | If futile, no hope for survival/cure | Medical treatment | |
| Jad al Haqq Ali al Haqq | Egypt | Former Grand Mufti of Egypt, Minister of Religious Endowments, Grand Sheikh of al-Azhar. | – | If terminally ill | Life-support | |
| Ebrahim Desai | South Africa, 1963 | Runs the | – | If terminal* | Life-support | |
| Ali Gomaa | Egypt, 1953 | Former Grand Mufti of Egypt | – | If useless* | Medical equipment utilised to keep a person alive | |
| Yusuf al-Qaradawi | Egypt/Qatar, 1926 | al-Azhar educated jurist based in Qatar, affiliated with IslamOnline, chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars | Recommended if useless | If hopeless recovery, too sick, ever-increasing pain, or brain death | Medical treatment | |
| Muhammad Salih al-Munajjid | Born in Syria in 1960, lives in Saudi Arabia | Runs IslamQA | in cases DNR is permitted by Saudi fatwā | Resuscitation (“R” in DNR) | ||
| Ikram ul Haq | USA | Founder and director of | – | If it worsens or does not improve health | Life-support |
Conditions justifying the withdrawal of medical care.
| Conditions justifying the withdrawal of medical care | Category of futility | |
|---|---|---|
| Useless/futile care | IOMS, Muhammad bin Adam al-Kawthari | |
| Terminal/Inevitable Death | OIC-IFA, Shaykh Jad al Haqq Ali al Haqq, Mufti Ebrahim Desai, Darul Uloom Zakariyya (respirator) | Imminent Demise |
| Brain Death | IFC-MWL, OIC-IFA, IOMS, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Mufti Ebrahim Desai | |
| Sickness gets out of hand, recovery happens to be tied to a miracle, and ever-increasing pain | Yusuf al-Qaradawi | Qualitative |
| Loss of | ECFR | |
| Worsens health | Ikram ul Haq | Physiologic or Qualitative |
| Lack of personal or relative assets to support continuation | IFA-I | |
| No hope for cure | Ali Gomaa | Imminent demise |