A situation is unfolding in Canada that is similar to the case of Terri
Schiavo, the patient who was starved and dehydrated to death in Florida
several years ago.
Joshua Kulendran Mayandy, a Sri Lankan native and Pentecostal pastor at
Humberlea Worship Centre in Etobicoke, suffered a heart attack and
brain damage May 29. He was in a coma but came out of it and has
improved. Alex Schadenberg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC)
tells OneNewsNow Mayandy has no family, no written instructions on what
to do, and no power-of-attorney agreement that could effect those
decisions.
"So the court then chose someone to make decisions for him, and the
person who he had chosen had originally agreed that...he would go along
with the hospital's wishes, which was no medical treatment, including
no IV fluids, foods or medicines at all," Schadenberg reports.
That means that food and fluids are considered a part of medical
treatment. However, members of the pastor's church agreed the
hospital's decision was contrary to Mayandy's wishes. The situation
changed once the EPC got involved.
"The substitute decision-maker agreed to allow a nurse, who is part of
the church, to come in every day and feed Pastor Mayandy, so that has
begun and it's still continuing," the EPC executive director explains.
He goes on to point out that the decision to restore food and water
came after the hospital received thousands of calls protesting the
removal of food and water. Schadenberg cautions that the situation is
not over yet because the substitute decision-maker could change course
again.
Meanwhile, the pastor is now able to swallow, and Schadenberg reports
that he is otherwise healthy and could go on to live many years.