Urgent!! Anyone in WA state--remember Dennis Lindberg?

by Tatiana 7 Replies latest watchtower medical

  • Tatiana
    Tatiana

    I received this email and I don't live in WA, but promised I would forward this here. For those who didn't hear about this case....

    http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/watchtower/medical/153452/1/Another-newspaper-article-on-the-Blood-Issue

    http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/watchtower/medical/168839/1/blood-petition-signatures-appreciated

    April, if you live in WA state or know anyone who does, we need help with Morgan's bill being presented to the committee next Tuesday, 2/10/09 - we need people who live in the districts of the legislative reps to send emails support this bill - soon to be called Dennis Lindberg Act:
    Morgan’s bill is being sponsored by our local representatives - it is going before the committee next Tuesday, Feb. 10thin Olympia. Morgan will testify to the 7 representatives sitting on this committee. WE NEED YOUR HELP to support bill #HB1759. Morgan will ask for it to be called the Dennis Lindberg Act.

    We need constituents who live in the following districts to email the representatives on this committee, since they are the ones who will be hearing the pro and con testimonies and making the final decision: 8th District, Larry Haler (Benton County); 16th District Maureen Walsh, (Walla Walla County); 26th District, Jan Angel and Larry Seaquist (S. Kitsap County and Pierce County); 32nd District, Ruth Kagi - co-sponsor of the bill, N.W. King County; and the 45th District, Roger Goodman (N. King County). IF YOU LIVE OR KNOW OF SOMEONE WHO LIVES in these districts, please send an email supporting this bill #. See below for navigation on the legislative web site of how to do this.

    To monitor what's happening in Olympia, go to
    www.leg.wa.gov By clicking on bill information you can obtain the text of the bill. Also you will see a pink e-mail sign that says "What is this?" Click on that and it will tell you how to "subscribe" to an RSS feed that will e-mail you as actions are taken on the bill. You can also click on Agendas to see what bills are on a committee's agenda and when the committee meets. And you can call the House Early Learning and Children's Services Committee at 360-786-7160 to get information about meetings and agendas also.

    This is such notice - we just received the recommended bill from our representative. It isn’t completely what we wished to have but are told it is a step in the right direction and can lay the foundation to revisit and take the bill further in upcoming sessions. We understand a bill similar to this was presented in 2001 and did not pass (CPS testified that a bill like this will increase their work load). The fact that we are attempting this again, with legislative support, is encouraging.

    We have had to remove the religion aspect and we cannot yet address the mature minor “label” by doctors and courts. But we have to start with something - and it actually makes Dr’s and CPS act immediately if a child is at “substantial risk of harm or death” due to refusal of medical care, instead of going back and forth as it happened with Dennis. Also, a guardian ad litem will be assigned to the child to ensure that what is best for the child is performed, not what the child/parents want, IF they do not have their own attorney. Of course, JW have their own attorneys, but this could help children of other religions who do not support life saving medical care.

    Thanks for your help!

    Gary, Jan, and Morgan Curry

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    I remember this

    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/341458_leukemia29.html

    Boy dies of leukemia after refusing treatment for religious reasons

    Because of his faith, Dennis Lindberg, 14, didn't want vital transfusions; his biological parents did. A judge sided with the son, who died last night.

    By CHERIE BLACK
    P-I REPORTER

    His life began under trying circumstances. Now, at the age of 14, his life has ended the same way.

    For Dennis Lindberg, most of his childhood depended on the kindness of strangers to help him survive. A few weeks ago, he made a decision that contributed to his death Wednesday night.

    The Mount Vernon teenager was diagnosed with leukemia Nov. 8 and since then had been confined to Seattle's Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center.

    Doctors said he needed blood transfusions to survive potentially lifesaving cancer treatments. But as a practicing Jehovah's Witness, Lindberg refused. Despite his age, he had been declared what is known as a "mature minor," meaning he was considered mature enough to make decisions about his treatment.

    Jehovah's Witnesses believe accepting a blood transfusion violates God's law.

    His aunt, Dianna Mincin, became his legal guardian four years ago after his father, now a recovering addict, was jailed for drug possession.

    Mincin is also a Jehovah's Witness, and supported Dennis' decision.

    The boy's biological parents did not.

    Dennis Lindberg Sr. -- Mincin's brother -- and Rachel Wherry flew to Seattle from their home in Boise on Tuesday to attend a 9 a.m. hearing, hoping a judge could force the transfusions.

    Wednesday morning, after hearing from the parents, the aunt, social workers and the boy's doctor, Skagit County Superior Court Judge John Meyer denied the plea. About 9 p.m., Lindberg Sr. called the Seattle P-I to say his son had died in his hospital bed.

    With the transfusions and other treatment, Lindberg had been given a 70 percent chance of surviving the next five years, Meyer said in court, based on what the boy's doctors told him. Without them, he was likely to die. But his decision in what the judge called a "stunning case, which brings into play issues including, but not confined to, religious freedoms," was based strictly on facts.

    "I don't believe Dennis' decision is the result of any coercion. He is mature and understands the consequences of his decision," Meyer said during Wednesday's court proceedings.

    "I don't think Dennis is trying to commit suicide. This isn't something Dennis just came upon, and he believes with the transfusion he would be unclean and unworthy."

    Parents and classmates of the boy, who had lived with his aunt for the past four years, cried in disbelief at the judge's decision. Wherry fled the courtroom in tears.

    Mincin has repeatedly declined to speak about her nephew's ordeal. For legal privacy reasons, doctors and officials at Children's also have declined to speak about the boy's condition.

    On a CaringBridge Web site that has now been deactivated, Mincin's final journal entry, dated Nov. 22, spoke to those who questioned the decision not to accept blood transfusions. She said that after her nephew made his decision, he "relaxed in a way that he has not relaxed since being admitted (to the hospital.) He is at peace."

    "For those reading (about) this journey our family has been on that are not one of Jehovah's Witnesses, we compassionately understand your confusion and, perhaps, even your anger at the decision that Dennis and his family have made," Mincin wrote. "We understand that this is an amazing bright young man who has before him 70, maybe 80 years to contribute to this world. While we empathize with your strong feelings, we ask that you attempt to respect Dennis' fight for what he and his family believe so strongly in."

    The decision was the final chapter in what has been a lifelong family drama for Lindberg. It is a saga that began when he was a baby born to parents addicted to methamphetamine.

    "I was always too scared to ask my mom if she did drugs," Lindberg wrote in a school essay two years ago about his childhood that was featured in the Skagit Valley Herald.

    Paul Joseph Brown / P-I
    Dennis Lindberg and Rachel Wherry leave Skagit County Courthouse after Judge John Meyer ruled that their son, Dennis Lindberg Jr., 14, could not be forced to receive blood transfusions to treat leukemia.

    "I saw a needle in a toilet once, but it didn't mean anything to me. I knew my mom had low blood pressure, was always pale and had extremely small pinhead pupils. For me, this was just normal."

    The boy's life was spent constantly moving and he was often left with neighbors for days while his parents were getting high, he told the Herald. He didn't go to school and couldn't read. He spent his summers in Mount Vernon with Mincin, who eventually became his guardian after Lindberg Sr. was jailed for drug possession.

    Both parents say they have completed drug treatment programs and are sober. They last saw their son in September when he and Mincin visited Boise.

    Since his diagnosis, though, access to information about their son's condition has been restricted. Their only updates had been through the now-defunct Web site profile, which is how they learned about the blood transfusion debate. They contacted Child Protective Services, who appointed a lawyer to each of them and paid to fly the couple to Seattle Tuesday to attend the first hearing.

    "My feelings have run the gamut from anger to tears not knowing who to believe and not to believe," said Lindberg Sr. "My sister has done a good job of raising him for the past four years, but her religious beliefs shouldn't be imposed on my son."

    He said not having his son for the past four years weighs heavily on him. He said they gave the boy to his sister so he didn't suffer while they were getting their lives back on track.

    "The decision would have been different had he been with us," he said. "He'd live through this treatment had we not made the decisions we made."

    Lindberg Sr. said his son was diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia, a cancer of the bone marrow that is the most common in children. Most children with this type of leukemia are cured after treatment, which can include blood transfusions, according to The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.

    Dr. Douglas Diekema, an ethicist at Children's and director of education at the Treuman Katz Center for Pediatric Bioethics, said the question was whether a 14-year-old really had the maturity to make medical and religious decisions on his own.

    "In my mind, if there is a role of the court it would be to test a 14-year-old and see just how intense he is about his decision," said Diekema. "My approach would be to push it a little further. If he fights you physically, then I'd respect that. But also, are you willing to tie him down every time he needs a transfusion knowing he'll need treatment for the next three years? You'll have a hard time finding a provider willing to do that."

    Lindberg Sr. said Wednesday's ruling shocked him, but after visiting his son later in the day, he decided not to appeal the judge's decision.

    He said doctors told him earlier Wednesday evening that the teenager, who had been unconscious since Tuesday, likely had suffered brain damage. After learning of his son's death, the father did not want to comment further.

    "We'll stay in town until the funeral," he said, "then we'll go back to Boise."

  • Tatiana
    Tatiana

    Thank you, purple...so if anyone lives in WA, please contact 8th District, Larry Haler (Benton County); 16th District Maureen Walsh, (Walla Walla County); 26th District, Jan Angel and Larry Seaquist (S. Kitsap County and Pierce County); 32nd District, Ruth Kagi - co-sponsor of the bill, N.W. King County; and the 45th District, Roger Goodman (N. King County).

    IF YOU LIVE OR KNOW OF SOMEONE WHO LIVES in these districts, please send an email supporting this bill #. Or call the House Early Learning and Children's Services Committee at 360-786-7160to get information about meetings and agendas also.

    Before another child dies.

  • Mrs. Fiorini
    Mrs. Fiorini

    Tatiana,

    You have a PM.

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    I don't live in those districts, but I'm going to write some letters this weekend. My father ran the bone marrow transplant program at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center. I'll mention it to Dad as well. Our names may add some clout.

  • drwtsn32
    drwtsn32

    I live in Benton County, WA, and just sent an email to Rep Larry Haler.

    Thanks for the heads up!

  • kurtbethel
    kurtbethel

    More WT human sacrifice bloodguilt!

  • drwtsn32
    drwtsn32

    Got this email reply:

    Thank you for your email.

    HB 1759 is being heard in the House Early Learning & Children Services Committee of which I am the ranking minority member. I plan to support the bill in committee and also if it reaches the floor of the House for a vote.

    Larry Haler
    State Representative

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