Pennsylvania's Supreme Court has ruled against family members who
wanted to end the life of a man with mental disabilities.
The court ruled that state law requires life-preserving treatment for
people who are not near death and have not refused treatment. Randall
Wenger of the Independence Law Center and an allied attorney with the
Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) tells OneNewsNow the court stood with
53-year-old David Hockenberry, who has had acute mental disabilities
since birth.
"His guardians -- his parents -- decided that they wanted to withhold
medical treatment for him when he had pneumonia," Wenger explains.
"They went to the courts to try to get the medical treatment stopped
because basically they thought he'd be better off dying from pneumonia
than being treated for pneumonia."
The trial court disagreed, so Hockenberry was treated and recovered
from the illness within a few weeks. However, his parents appealed the
decision to the state Supreme Court in order to deny medical treatment
in the future.
"Having a disability shouldn't be a death sentence when a treatable
medical condition arises," the ADF-allied attorney contends.
In this case, Wenger thinks the court did the right thing in ruling in
favor of life for the disabled, so his group is "pleased and gratified
that there are such good rulings so we don't have to continue walking
down that frustrating, slippery slope."