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-
- WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE DOE?
-
- Seven years ago, the national press was much taken with a battle
- between the United States government and the parents of a New
- York infant invariably described the press as severely
- handicapped or more often, severely deformed (as if she were the
- Elephant Man). She was a spina bifida child. [Of course, the
- "Elephant Man" has the same right to live as "Baby Jane."--EA]
-
- Spina bifida is a lesion in the spinal column. If it is not
- repaired through immediate surgery, there is danger of infection
- that can lead to permanent brain damage. Usually accompanying
- spina bifida is an accumulation of spinal fluid in the brain. If
- a shunt is not inserted to drain the fluid, the pressure on the
- brain often leads to mental retardation.
-
- The parents, however, chose to give the child--known in the
- headlines as Baby Jane Doe--only "conservative treatment." No
- surgery, and for a long time, no shunt. After all, as nearly all
- the reporters and nearly all the editorial writers assured their
- readers and viewers, it really did not matter what was done for
- Baby Jane Doe.
-
-
- Either way, she wouldn't live all that long and as long as she
- did live, she would be profoundly retarded and in constant pain,
- would always be bedridden, would never be able to learn anything,
- and would never be able to recognize anyone, even her parents. In
- grim sum, her quality of life would be so low--the press
- implied--that her departure would be a blessing of her parents
- and, of course, herself. ["Quality" is inherent in life itself.--EA]
-
- The only problem with this prognosis was that a number of leading
- pediatric neurologists--based on what they knew of baby Jane
- Doe's condition--told me it wasn't true. I talked with, among
- others, Dr. David McLone, chief of neurosurgery at Children's
- Memorial Hospital in Chicago. He said that his extensive
- experience with spina bifida children gave him confidence that if
- she was treated at his hospital, she would grow up to have normal
- intelligence and would be walking, probably with some bracing.
-
- Also much interested in the case was Dr. C. Everett Koop, then the
- Surgeon General--and for many years before, one of the more renowned
- pediatric surgeons in the country. He wanted to see the hospital
- records, which had been sealed because of so much national attention to
- the case.
-
-
-
- The federal government brought suit--under Section 504 of the 1973
- Rehabilitation Act--to find out from the records whether Baby Jane Doe
- was being discriminated against because of her handicap. Section 504
- says that where federal funds are involved, there can be no such
- discrimination. Therefore, said the government, handicapped infants--
- like all other infants in the nursery--must get appropriate medical treatment.
-
- The legal team for the parents included the attorney general of New York
- as well as the New York Civil Liberties Union. They maintained that the
- privacy rights of the parents and of the infant must be protected at all
- costs against "Big Brother."
-
- Supporting the government--though there was little notice of these
- allies in the press--were the American Coalition of Citizens with
- Disabilities, the Association for Persons with Severe Handicaps, the
- Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund and the Disability Rights
- Union.
-
- Unlike the many able-bodied Americans, the disabled know that treatment
- based on "quality of life" can strip you forever of all your civil
- liberties, and your life.
-
-
-
-
- The government lost in the courts all the way. The privacy rights of the
- parents and infant getting "conservative treatment" prevailed. The
- "intruders" were routed.
-
- In the years since, it has been learned that the child's real first
- name (we've never known the last) is Keri-Lynn. And in a recent Newsday
- story by Kathleen Kerr, it turns out that Keri-Lynn is not in pain, that
- she laughs and plays with her parents and other children, and recognizes
- her parents with no trouble at all.
-
- But she cannot walk. She attends special classes; her intelligence is
- considered between low-normal and educable.
-
- What would have happened if the government and Dr. Koop had won in 1983
- and Keri-Lynn had received what is called "aggressive treatment"?
- Kathleen Kerr of Newsday asked Dr. Koop. ["Aggressive treatment" is ANY
- treatment given a potential euthanasia victim.--EA] He said to her, as
- he said to me, that if Keri-Lynn had been able to get full treatment
- through the anti-discrimination provisions of the federal Rehabilitation
- Act, "she would be in a considerably different condition today."
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- It never occurred to the American Civil Liberties Union, which was
- protecting the rights of the parents to be the sole decision-makers in
- the case, that Keri-Lynn was not a fetus and had her own due process and
- equal protection rights under the Constitution. By their own principles,
- the civil libertarians were on the wrong side. Keri-Lynn was being
- discriminated against because she was handicapped. But the ACLU saw her,
- and still does, as being an extension of Roe v. Wade.
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- (Nat Hentoff, The Washington Post, 12/11/90) [For further information
- about Keri-Lynn's story, contact CURE, 812 Stephen St., Berkeley
- Springs, WV 25411, 304-258-LIFE.]
-
- Reprinted with permission.
-