[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 45 Volume 4]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 45CFR1340.20]



[Page 251-257]

 

                        TITLE 45--PUBLIC WELFARE

 

CHAPTER XIII--OFFICE OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH 

                           AND HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 1340_CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT PREVENTION AND TREATMENT--Table of Contents

 

              Subpart C_Discretionary Grants and Contracts

 

Sec.  1340.20  Confidentiality.





    All projects and programs supported under the Act must hold all 

information related to personal facts or circumstances about individuals 

involved in those projects or programs confidential and shall not 

disclose any of the information in other than summary, statistical, or 

other form which does not identify specific individuals, except in 

accordance with Sec.  1340.14(i).



   Appendix to Part 1340--Interpretative Guidelines Regarding 45 CFR 

          1340.15--Services and Treatment for Disabled Infants



    Explanatory Note: The interpretative guidelines which follow were 

based on the proposed rule (49 FR 48160, December 10, 1984) and were 

published with the final rule on April 15, 1985 (50 FR 14878). 

References to the ``proposed rule'' and ``final rule'' in these 

guidelines refer to these actions.



    Since that time, the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act was 

revised, reorganized, and reauthorized by Public Law 100-294 (April 25, 

1988) and renumbered by Pub. L. 101-126 (October 25, 1989). Accordingly, 

the definitions formerly in section 3 of the Act are now found in 

section 113; the State eligibility requirements formerly in section 4 of 

the Act are now found in section 107; and references to the ``final 

rule'' mean references to Sec.  1340.15 of this part.

    This appendix sets forth the Department's interpretative guidelines 

regarding several terms that appear in the definition of the term 

``withholding of medically indicated treatment'' in section 3(3) of the 

Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act, as amended by section 121(3) 

of the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984. This statutory definition is 

repeated in Sec.  1340.15(b)(2) of the final rule.

    The Department's proposed rule to implement those provisions of the 

Child Abuse Amendments of 1984 relating to services and treatment for 

disabled infants included a number of proposed clarifying definitions of 

several terms used in the statutory definition. The preamble to the 

proposed rule explained these proposed clarifying definitions, and in 

some cases used examples of specific diagnoses to elaborate on meaning.

    During the comment period on the proposed rule, many commenters 

urged deletion of these clarifying definitions and avoidance of examples 

of specific diagnoses. Many commenters also objected to the specific 

wording of some of the proposed clarifying definitions, particularly in 

connection with the proposed use of the word ``imminent'' to describe 

the proximity in time at which death is anticipated regardless of 

treatment in relation to circumstances under which treatment (other than 

appropriate nutrition, hydration and medication) need not be provided. A 

letter from the six principal sponsors of the ``compromise amendment'' 

which became the pertinent provisions of the Child Abuse Amendments of 

1984 urged deletion of ``imminent'' and careful consideration of the 

other concerns expressed.

    After consideration of these recommendations, the Department decided 

not to adopt these several proposed clarifying definitions as part of 

the final rule. It was also decided that effective implementation of the 

program established by the Child Abuse Amendments would be advanced by 

the Department stating its interpretations of several key terms in the 

statutory definition. This is the purpose of this appendix.

    The interpretative guidelines that follow have carefully considered 

comments submitted during the comment period on the proposed rule. These 

guidelines are set forth and explained without the use of specific 

diagnostic exmples to elaborate on meaning.

    Finally, by way of introduction, the Department does not seek to 

establish these interpretative guidelines as binding rules of law, nor 

to prejudge the exercise of reasonable medical judgment in responding to 

specific circumstances. Rather, this guidance is intended to assist in 

interpreting the statutory definition so that it may be rationally and 

thoughtfully applied in specific contexts in a manner fully consistent 

with the legislative intent.

    1. In general: The statutory definition of ``withholding of 

medically indicated treatment.''

    Section 1340.15(b)(2) of the final rule defines the term 

``withholding of medically indicated treatment'' with a definition 

identical to that which appears in section 3(3) of the Act (as amended 

by section 121(3) of the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984).

    This definition has several main features. First, it establishes the 

basic principle that all disabled infants with life-threatening 

conditions must be given medically indicated treatment, defined in terms 

of action to respond to the infant's life-threatening conditions by 

providing treatment (including appropriate nutrition, hydration or 

medication) which, in the treating physician's (or physicians') 

reasonable medical judgment, will be most likely to be effective in 

ameliorating or correcting all such conditions.

    Second, the statutory definition spells out three circumstances 

under which treatment is not considered ``medically indicated.'' These 

are when, in the treating physician's (or physicians') reasonable 

medical judgment:





[[Page 252]]





--The infant is chronically and irreversibly comatose:

--The provision of such treatment would merely prolong dying, not be 

effective in ameliorating or correcting all of the infant's life-

threatening conditions, or otherwise be futile in terms of survival of 

the infant; or

--The provision of such treatment would be virtually futile in terms of 

survival of the infant and the treatment itself under such circumstances 

would be inhumane.



    The third key feature of the statutory definition is that even when 

one of these three circumstances is present, and thus the failure to 

provide treatment is not a ``withholding of medically indicated 

treatment,'' the infant must nonetheless be provided with appropriate 

nutrition, hydration, and medication.

    Fourth, the definition's focus on the potential effectiveness of 

treatment in ameliorating or correcting life-threatening conditions 

makes clear that it does not sanction decisions based on subjective 

opinions about the future ``quality of life'' of a retarded or disabled 

person.

    The fifth main feature of the statutory definition is that its 

operation turns substantially on the ``reasonable medical judgment'' of 

the treating physician or physicians. The term ``reasonable medical 

judgment'' is defined in Sec.  1340.15(b)(3)(ii) of the final rule, as 

it was in the Conference Committee Report on the Act, as a medical 

judgment that would be made by a reasonably prudent physician, 

knowledgeable about the case and the treatment possibilities with 

respect to the medical conditions involved.

    The Department's interpretations of key terms in the statutory 

definition are fully consistent with these basic principles reflected in 

the definition. The discussion that follows is organized under headings 

that generally correspond to the proposed clarifying definitions that 

appeared in the proposed rule but were not adopted in the final rule. 

The discussion also attempts to analyze and respond to significant 

comments received by the Department.

    2. The term ``life-threatening condition''.

    Clause (b)(3)(ii) of the proposed rule proposed a definition of the 

term ``life-threatening condition.'' This term is used in the statutory 

definition in the following context:

    [T]he term ``withholding of medically indicated treatment'' means 

the failure to respond to the infant's life-threatening conditions by 

providing treatment (including appropriate nutrition, hydration, and 

medication) which, in the treating physician's or physicians' reasonable 

medical judgment, will be most likely to be effective in ameliorating or 

correcting all such conditions [, except that] * * *. [Emphasis 

supplied].

    It appears to the Department that the applicability of the statutory 

definition might be uncertain to some people in cases where a condition 

may not, strictly speaking, by itself be life-threatening, but where the 

condition significantly increases the risk of the onset of complications 

that may threaten the life of the infant. If medically indicated 

treatment is available for such a condition, the failure to provide it 

may result in the onset of complications that, by the time the condition 

becomes life-threatening in the strictest sense, will eliminate or 

reduce the potential effectiveness of any treatment. Such a result 

cannot, in the Department's view, be squared with the Congressional 

intent.

    Thus, the Department interprets the term ``life-threatening 

condition'' to include a condition that, in the treating physician's or 

physicians' reasonable medical judgment, significantly increases the 

risk of the onset of complications that may threaten the life of the 

infant.

    In response to comments that the proposed rule's definition was 

potentially overinclusive by covering any condition that one could argue 

``may'' become life-threatening, the Department notes that the statutory 

standard of ``the treating physician's or physicians' reasonable medical 

judgment'' is incorporated in the Department's interpretation, and is 

fully applicable.

    Other commenters suggested that this interpretation would bring 

under the scope of the definition many irreversible conditions for which 

no corrective treatment is available. This is certainly not the intent. 

The Department's interpretation implies nothing about whether, or what, 

treatment should be provided. It simply makes clear that the criteria 

set forth in the statutory definition for evaluating whether, or what, 

treatment should be provided are applicable. That is just the start, not 

the end, of the analysis. The analysis then takes fully into account the 

reasonable medical judgment regarding potential effectiveness of 

possible treatments, and the like.

    Other comments were that it is unnecessary to state any 

interpretation because reasonable medical judgment commonly deems the 

conditions described as life-threatening and responds accordingly. HHS 

agrees that this is common practice followed under reasonable medical 

judgment, just as all the standards incorporated in the statutory 

definition reflect common practice followed under reasonable medical 

judgment. For the reasons stated above, however, the Department believes 

it is useful to say so in these interpretative guidelines.

    3. The term ``treatment'' in the context of adequate evaluation.

    Clause (b)(3)(ii) of the proposed rule proposed a definition of the 

term ``treatment.'' Two separate concepts were dealt with in



[[Page 253]]



clause (A) and (B), respectively, of the proposed rule. Both of these 

clauses were designed to ensure that the Congressional intent regarding 

the issues to be considered under the analysis set forth in the 

statutory definition is fully effectuated. Like the guidance regarding 

``life-threatening condition,'' discussed above, the Department's 

interpretations go to the applicability of the statutory analysis, not 

its result.

    The Department believes that Congress intended that the standard of 

following reasonable medical judgment regarding the potential 

effectiveness of possible courses of action should apply to issues 

regarding adequate medical evaluation, just as it does to issues 

regarding adequate medical intervention. This is apparent Congressional 

intent because Congress adopted, in the Conference Report's definition 

of ``reasonable medical judgment,'' the standard of adequate knowledge 

about the case and the treatment possibilities with respect to the 

medical condition involved.

    Having adequate knowledge about the case and the treatment 

possibilities involved is, in effect, step one of the process, because 

that is the basis on which ``reasonable medical judgment'' will operate 

to make recommendations regarding medical intervention. Thus, part of 

the process to determine what treatment, if any, ``will be most likely 

to be effective in ameliorating or correcting'' all life-threatening 

conditions is for the treating physician or physicians to make sure they 

have adequate information about the condition and adequate knowledge 

about treatment possibilities with respect to the condition involved. 

The standard for determining the adequacy of the information and 

knowledge is the same as the basic standard of the statutory definition: 

reasonable medical judgment. A reasonably prudent physician faced with a 

particular condition about which he or she needs additional information 

and knowledge of treatment possibilities would take steps to gain more 

information and knowledge by, quite simply, seeking further evaluation 

by, or consultation with, a physician or physicians whose expertise is 

appropriate to the condition(s) involved or further evaluation at a 

facility with specialized capabilities regarding the conditions(s) 

involved.

    Thus, the Department interprets the term ``treatment'' to include 

(but not be limited to) any further evaluation by, or consultation with, 

a physician or physicians whose expertise is appropriate to the 

condition(s) involved or further evaluation at a facility with 

specialized capabilities regarding the condition(s) involved that, in 

the treating physician's or physicians' reasonable medical judgment, is 

needed to assure that decisions regarding medical intervention are based 

on adequate knowledge about the case and the treatment possibilities 

with respect to the medical conditions involved.

    This reflects the Department's interpretation that failure to 

respond to an infant's life-threatening conditions by obtaining any 

further evaluations or consultations that, in the treating physician's 

reasonable medical judgment, are necessary to assure that decisions 

regarding medical intervention are based on adequate knowledge about the 

case and the treatment possibilities involved constitutes a 

``withholding of medically indicated treatment.'' Thus, if parents 

refuse to consent to such a recommendation that is based on the treating 

physician's reasonable medical judgment that, for example, further 

evaluation by a specialist is necessary to permit reasonable medical 

judgments to be made regarding medical intervention, this would be a 

matter for appropriate action by the child protective services system.

    In response to comments regarding the related provision in the 

proposed rule, this interpretative guideline makes quite clear that this 

interpretation does not deviate from the basic principle of reliance on 

reasonable medical judgment to determine the extent of the evaluations 

necessary in the particular case. Commenters expressed concerns that the 

provision in the proposed rule would intimidate physicians to seek 

transfer of seriously ill infants to tertiary level facilities much more 

often than necessary, potentially resulting in diversion of the limited 

capacities of these facilities away from those with real needs for the 

specialized care, unnecessary separation of infants from their parents 

when equally beneficial treatment could have been provided at the 

community or regional hospital, inappropriate deferral of therapy while 

time-consuming arrangements can be affected, and other counterproductive 

ramifications. The Department intended no intimidation, prescription or 

similar influence on reasonable medical judgment, but rather, intended 

only to affirm that it is the Department's interpretation that the 

reasonable medical judgment standard applies to issues of medical 

evaluation, as well as issues of medical intervention.

    4. The term ``treatment'' in the context of multiple treatments.

    Clause (b)(3)(iii)(B) of the proposed rule was designed to clarify 

that, in evaluating the potential effectiveness of a particular medical 

treatment or surgical procedure that can only be reasonably evaluated in 

the context of a complete potential treatment plan, the ``treatment'' to 

be evaluated under the standards of the statutory definition includes 

the multiple medical treatments and/or surgical procedures over a period 

of time that are designed to ameliorate or correct a life-threatening 

condition or conditions. Some commenters stated that it could be 

construed to require the carrying out of a



[[Page 254]]



long process of medical treatments or surgical procedures regardless of 

the lack of success of those done first. No such meaning is intended.

    The intent is simply to characterize that which must be evaluated 

under the standards of the statutory definition, not to imply anything 

about the results of the evaluation. If parents refuse consent for a 

particular medical treatment or surgical procedure that by itself may 

not correct or ameliorate all life-threatening conditions, but is 

recommended as part of a total plan that involves multiple medical 

treatments and/or surgical procedures over a period of time that, in the 

treating physician's reasonable medical judgment, will be most likely to 

be effective in ameliorating or correcting all such conditions, that 

would be a matter for appropriate action by the child protective 

services system.

    On the other hand, if, in the treating physician's reasonable 

medical judgment, the total plan will, for example, be virtually futile 

and inhumane, within the meaning of the statutory term, then there is no 

``withholding of medically indicated treatment.'' Similarly, if a 

treatment plan is commenced on the basis of a reasonable medical 

judgment that there is a good chance that it will be effective, but due 

to a lack of success, unfavorable complications, or other factors, it 

becomes the treating physician's reasonable medical judgment that 

further treatment in accord with the prospective treatment plan, or 

alternative treatment, would be futile, then the failure to provide that 

treatment would not constitute a ``withholding of medically indicated 

treatment.'' This analysis does not divert from the reasonable medical 

judgment standard of the statutory definition; it simply makes clear the 

Department's interpretation that the failure to evaluate the potential 

effectiveness of a treatment plan as a whole would be inconsistent with 

the legislative intent.

    Thus, the Department interprets the term ``treatment'' to include 

(but not be limited to) multiple medical treatments and/or surgical 

procedures over a period of time that are designed to ameliorate or 

correct a life-threatening condition or conditions.

    5. The term ``merely prolong dying.''

    Clause (b)(3)(v) of the proposed rule proposed a definition of the 

term ``merely prolong dying,'' which appears in the statutory 

definition. The proposed rule's provision stated that this term ``refers 

to situations where death is imminent and treatment will do no more than 

postpone the act of dying.''

    Many commenters argued that the incorporation of the word 

``imminent,'' and its connotation of immediacy, appeared to deviate from 

the Congressional intent, as developed in the course of the lengthy 

legislative negotiations, that reasonable medical judgments can and do 

result in nontreatment decisions regarding some conditions for which 

treatment will do no more than temporarily postpone a death that will 

occur in the near future, but not necessarily within days. The six 

principal sponsors of the compromise amendment also strongly urged 

deletion of the word ``imminent.''

    The Department's use of the term ``imminent'' in the proposed rule 

was not intended to convey a meaning not fully consonant with the 

statute. Rather, the Department intended that the word ``imminent'' 

would be applied in the context of the condition involved, and in such a 

context, it would not be understood to specify a particular number of 

days. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, this clarification 

was proposed to make clear that the ``merely prolong dying'' clause of 

the statutory definition would not be applicable to situations where 

treatment will not totally correct a medical condition but will give a 

patient many years of life. The Department continues to hold to this 

view.

    To eliminate the type of misunderstanding evidenced in the comments, 

and to assure consistency with the statutory definition, the word 

``imminent'' is not being adopted for purposes of these interpretative 

guidelines.

    The Department interprets the term ``merely prolong dying'' as 

referring to situations where the prognosis is for death and, in the 

treating physician's (or physicians') reasonable medical judgment, 

further or alternative treatment would not alter the prognosis in an 

extension of time that would not render the treatment futile.

    Thus, the Department continues to interpret Congressional intent as 

not permitting the ``merely prolong dying'' provision to apply where 

many years of life will result from the provision of treatment, or where 

the prognosis is not for death in the near future, but rather the more 

distant future. The Department also wants to make clear it does not 

intend the connotations many commenters associated with the word 

``imminent.'' In addition, contrary to the impression some commenters 

appeared to have regarding the proposed rule, the Department's 

interpretation is that reasonable medical judgments will be formed on 

the basis of knowledge about the condition(s) involved, the degree of 

inevitability of death, the probable effect of any potential treatments, 

the projected time period within which death will probably occur, and 

other pertinent factors.

    6. The term ``not be effective in ameliorating or correcting all of 

the infant's life threatening conditions'' in the context of a future 

life-threatening condition.

    Clause (b)(3)(vi) of the proposed rule proposed a definition of the 

term ``not be effective in ameliorating or correcting all the infant's 

life-threatening conditions'' used in



[[Page 255]]



the statutory definition of ``withholding of medically indicated 

treatment.''

    The basic point made by the use of this term in the statutory 

definition was explained in the Conference Committee Report:

    Under the definition, if a disabled infant suffers more than one 

life-threatening condition and, in the treating physician's or 

physicians' reasonable medical judgment, there is no effective treatment 

for one of those conditions, then the infant is not covered by the terms 

of the amendment (except with respect to appropriate nutrition, 

hydration, and medication) concerning the withholding of medically 

indicated treatment.



H. Conf. Rep. No. 1038, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 41 (1984).

    This clause of the proposed rule dealt with the application of this 

concept in two contexts: First, when the nontreatable condition will not 

become life-threatening in the near future, and second, when humaneness 

makes palliative treatment medically indicated.

    With respect to the context of a future life-threatening condition, 

it is the Department's interpretation that the term ``not be effective 

in ameliorating or correcting all of the infant's life-threatening 

conditions'' does not permit the withholding of treatment on the grounds 

that one or more of the infant's life-threatening conditions, although 

not life-threatening in the near future, will become life-threatening in 

the more distant future.

    This clarification can be restated in the terms of the Conference 

Committee Report excerpt, quoted just above, with the italicized words 

indicating the clarification, as follows: Under the definition, if a 

disabled infant suffers from more than one life-threatening condition 

and, in the treating physician's or physicians' reasonable medical 

judgment, there is no effective treatment for one of these conditions 

that threatens the life of the infant in the near future, then the 

infant is not covered by the terms of the amendment (except with respect 

to appropriate nutrition, hyrdation, and medication) concerning the 

withholding of medically indicated treatment; but if the nontreatable 

condition will not become life-threatening until the more distant 

future, the infant is covered by the terms of the amendment.

    Thus, this interpretative guideline is simply a corollary to the 

Department's interpretation of ``merely prolong dying,'' stated above, 

and is based on the same understanding of Congressional intent, 

indicated above, that if a condition will not become life-threatening 

until the more distant future, it should not be the basis for 

withholding treatment.

    Also for the same reasons explained above, the word ``imminent'' 

that appeared in the proposed definition is not adopted for purposes of 

this interpretative guideline. The Department makes no effort to draw an 

exact line to separate ``near future'' from ``more distant future.'' As 

noted above in connection with the term ``merely prolong dying,'' the 

statutory definition provides that it is for reasonable medical 

judgment, applied to the specific condition and circumstances involved, 

to determine whether the prognosis of death, because of its nearness in 

time, is such that treatment would not be medically indicated.

    7. The term ``not be effective in ameliorating or correcting all 

life-threatening conditions'' in the context of palliative treatment.

    Clause (b)(3)(iv)(B) of the proposed rule proposed to define the 

term ``not be effective in ameliorating or correcting all life-

threatening conditions'' in the context where the issue is not life-

saving treatment, but rather palliative treatment to make a condition 

more tolerable. An example of this situation is where an infant has more 

than one life-threatening condition, at least one of which is not 

treatable and will cause death in the near future. Palliative treatment 

is available, however, that will, in the treating physician's reasonable 

medical judgment, relieve severe pain associated with one of the 

conditions. If it is the treating physician's reasonable medical 

judgment that this palliative treatment will ameliorate the infant's 

overall condition, taking all individual conditions into account, even 

though it would not ameliorate or correct each condition, then this 

palliative treatment is medically indicated. Simply put, in the context 

of ameliorative treatment that will make a condition more tolerable, the 

term ``not be effective in ameliorating or correcting all life-

threatening conditions'' should not be construed as meaning each and 

every condition, but rather as referring to the infant's overall 

condition.

    HHS believes Congress did not intend to exclude humane treatment of 

this kind from the scope of ``medically indicated treatment.'' The 

Conference Committee Report specifically recognized that ``it is 

appropriate for a physician, in the exercise of reasonable medical 

judgment, to consider that factor [humaneness] in selecting among 

effective treatments.'' H. Conf. Rep. No. 1038, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 41 

(1984). In addition, the articulation in the statutory definition of 

circumstances in which treatment need not be provided specifically 

states that ``appropriate nutrition, hydration, and medication'' must 

nonetheless be provided. The inclusion in this proviso of medication, 

one (but not the only) potential palliative treatment to relieve severe 

pain, corroborates the Department's interpretation that such palliative 

treatment that will ameliorate the infant's overall condition, and that 

in the exercise of reasonable medical judgment is humane and medically 

indicated, was not intended by Congress to be outside the scope of the 

statutory definition.



[[Page 256]]



    Thus, it is the Department's interpretation that the term ``not be 

effective in ameliorating or correcting all of the infant's life-

threatening conditions'' does not permit the withholding of ameliorative 

treatment that, in the treating physician's or physicians' reasonable 

medical judgment, will make a condition more tolerable, such as 

providing palliative treatment to relieve severe pain, even if the 

overall prognosis, taking all conditions into account, is that the 

infant will not survive.

    A number of commenters expressed concerns about some of the examples 

contained in the preamble of the proposed rule that discussed the 

proposed definition relating to this point, and stated that, depending 

on medical complications, exact prognosis, relationships to other 

conditions, and other factors, the treatment suggested in the examples 

might not necessarily be the treatment that reasonable medical judgment 

would decide would be most likely to be effective. In response to these 

comments, specific diagnostic examples have not been included in this 

discussion, and this interpretative guideline makes clear that the 

``reasonable medical judgment'' standard applies on this point as well.

    Other commenters argued that an interpretative guideline on this 

point is unnecessary because reasonable medical judgment would commonly 

provide ameliorative or palliative treatment in the circumstances 

described. The Department agrees that such treatment is common in the 

exercise of resaonable medical judgment, but believes it useful, for the 

reasons stated, to provide this interpretative guidance.

    8. The term ``virtually futile''.

    Clause (b)(3)(vii) of the proposed rule proposed a definition of the 

term ``virtually futile'' contained in the statutory definition. The 

context of this term in the statutory definition is:

    [T]he term ``withholding of medically indicated treatment'' * * * 

does not include the failure to provide treatment (other than 

appropriate nutrition, hydration, or medication) to an infant when, in 

the treating physician's or physicians' reasonable medical judgment, * * 

* the provision of such treatment would be virtually futile in terms of 

the survival of the infant and the treatment itself under such 

circumstances would be inhumane. Section 3(3)(C) of the Act [emphasis 

supplied].

    The Department interprets the term ``virtually futile'' to mean that 

the treatment is highly unlikely to prevent death in the near future.

    This interpretation is similar to those offered in connection with 

``merely prolong dying'' and ``not be effective in ameliorating or 

correcting all life-threatening conditions'' in the context of a future 

life-threatening condition, with the addition of a characterization of 

likelihood that corresponds to the statutory word ``virtually.'' For the 

reasons explained in the discussion of ``merely prolong dying,'' the 

word ``imminent'' that was used in the proposed rule has not been 

adopted for purposes of this interpretative guideline.

    Some commenters expressed concern regarding the words ``highly 

unlikely,'' on the grounds that such certitude is often medically 

impossible. Other commenters urged that a distinction should be made 

between generally utilized treatments and experimental treatments. The 

Department does not believe any special clarifications are needed to 

respond to these comments. The basic standard of reasonable medical 

judgment applies to the term ``virtually futile.'' The Department's 

interpretation does not suggest an impossible or unrealistic standard of 

certitude for any medical judgment. Rather, the standard adopted in the 

law is that there be a ``reasonable medical judgment.'' Similarly, 

reasonable medical judgment is the standard for evaluating potential 

treatment possibilities on the basis of the actual circumstances of the 

case. HHS does not believe it would be helpful to try to establish 

distinctions based on characterizations of the degree of general usage, 

extent of validated efficacy data, or other similar factors. The factors 

considered in the exercise of reasonable medical judgment, including any 

factors relating to human subjects experimentation standards, are not 

disturbed.

    9. The term ``the treatment itself under such circumstances would be 

inhumane.''

    Clause (b)(3)(viii) of the proposed rule proposed a definition of 

the term ``the treatment itself under such circumstances would be 

inhumane,'' that appears in the statutory definition. The context of 

this term in the statutory definition is that it is not a ``withholding 

of medically indicated treatment'' to withhold treatment (other than 

appropriate nutrition, hydration, or medication) when, in the treating 

physician's reasonable medical judgment, ``the provision of such 

treatment would be virtually futile in terms of the survival of the 

infant and the treatment itself under such circumstances would be 

inhumane.'' Sec.  3(3)(C) of the Act.

    The Department interprets the term ``the treatment itself under such 

circumstances would be inhumane'' to mean the treatment itself involves 

significant medical contraindications and/or significant pain and 

suffering for the infant that clearly outweigh the very slight potential 

benefit of the treatment for an infant highly unlikely to survive. (The 

Department further notes that the use of the term ``inhumane'' in this 

context is not intended to suggest that consideration of the humaneness 

of a particular treatment is not legitimate in any other context; 

rather, it is recognized that it is appropriate for a physician, in the 

exercise of reasonable



[[Page 257]]



medical judgment, to consider that factor in selecting among effective 

treatments.)

    Other clauses of the statutory definition focus on the expected 

result of the possible treatment. This provision of the statutory 

definition adds a consideration relating to the process of possible 

treatment. It recognizes that in the exercise of reasonable medical 

judgment, there are situations where, although there is some slight 

chance that the treatment will be beneficial to the patient (the 

potential treatment is considered virtually futile, rather than futile), 

the potential benefit is so outweighed by negative factors relating to 

the process of the treatment itself that, under the circumstances, it 

would be inhumane to subject the patient to the treatment.

    The Department's interpretation is designed to suggest the factors 

that should be taken into account in this difficult balance. A number of 

commenters argued that the interpretation should permit, as part of the 

evaluation of whether treatment would be inhumane, consideration of the 

infant's future ``quality of life.''

    The Department strongly believes such an interpretation would be 

inconsistent with the statute. The statute specifies that the provision 

applies only where the treatment would be ``virtually futile in terms of 

the survival of the infant,'' and the ``treatment itself under such 

circumstances would be inhumane.'' (Emphasis supplied.) The balance is 

clearly to be between the very slight chance that treatment will allow 

the infant to survive and the negative factors relating to the process 

of the treatment. These are the circumstances under which reasonable 

medical judgment could decide that the treatment itself would be 

inhumane.

    Some commenters expressed concern about the use of terms such as 

``clearly outweight'' in the description of this balance on the grounds 

that such precision is impractical. Other commenters argued that this 

interpretation could be construed to mandate useless and painful 

treatment. The Department believes there is no basis for these worries 

because ``reasonable medical judgment'' is the governing standard. The 

interpretative guideline suggests nothing other than application of this 

standard. What the guideline does is set forth the Department's 

interpretation that the statute directs the reasonable medical judgment 

to considerations relating to the slight chance of survival and the 

negative factors regarding the process of treatment and to the balance 

between them that would support a conclusion that the treatment itself 

would be inhumane.

    Other commenters suggested adoption of a statement contained in the 

Conference Committee Report that makes clear that the use of the term 

``inhumane'' in the statute was not intended to suggest that 

consideration of the humaneness of a particular treatment is not 

legitimate in any other context. The Department has adopted this 

statement as part of its interpretative guideline.

    10. Other terms.

    Some comments suggested that the Department clarify other terms used 

in the statutory definition of ``withholding of medically-indicated 

treatment,'' such as the term ``appropriate nutrition, hydration or 

medication'' in the context of treatment that may not be withheld, 

notwithstanding the existence of one of the circumstances under which 

the failure to provide treatment is not a ``withholding of medically 

indicated treatment.'' Some commenters stated, for example, that very 

potent pharmacologic agents, like other methods of medical intervention, 

can produce results accurately described as accomplishing no more than 

to merely prolong dying, or be futile in terms of the survival of the 

infant, or the like, and that, therefore, the Department should clarify 

that the proviso regarding ``appropriate nutrition, hydration or 

medication'' should not be construed entirely independently of the 

circumstances under which other treatment need not be provided.

    The Department has not adopted an interpretative guideline on this 

point because it appears none is necessary. As noted above in the 

discussion of palliative treatment, the Department recognizes that there 

is no absolutely clear line between medication and treatment other than 

medication that would justify excluding the latter from the scope of 

palliative treatment that reasonable medical judgment would find 

medically indicated, notwithstanding a very poor prognosis.

    Similarly, the Department recognizes that in some circumstances, 

certain pharmacologic agents, not medically indicated for palliative 

purposes, might, in the exercise of reasonable medical judgment, also 

not be indicated for the purpose of correcting or ameliorating any 

particular condition because they will, for example, merely prolong 

dying. However, the Department believes the word ``appropriate'' in this 

proviso of the statutory definition is adequate to permit the exercise 

of reasonable medical judgment in the scenario referred to by these 

commenters.

    At the same time, it should be clearly recognized that the statute 

is completely unequivocal in requiring that all infants receive 

``appropriate nutrition, hydration, and medication,'' regardless of 

their condition or prognosis.



[50 FR 14889, Apr. 15, 1985, as amended at 55 FR 27640, July 5, 1990]



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