Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Pet poetry

Tails of the City, the San Francisco Chronicle pet blog, recently ran a pet haiku contest. Here are the results.

Here's one of the submissions that I particularly like:

Dogs wait patiently / With their origami ears / Folded precisely. -J. Fenton

Monday, May 18, 2009

Even the best-laid plans...

can go awry. Sometime we call this "law in action"--when the legally correct thing is ignored, and the person in front of you says something else is required or expected. Case in point, the instances where same-sex partners were denied visitation access to their ill partners in hospitals. The New York Times reported on two such couples, where the access-seeking partner had a valid health care power of attorney, but was turned away anyway.

[One] case, now the subject of a federal lawsuit in Florida, is being watched by gay rights groups, which say same-sex partners often report being excluded from a patient’s room because they aren’t “real” family members.

And lawyers say the case could affect the way hospitals treat all patients with nonmarital relationships, including older people who choose not to marry, unmarried heterosexual couples and single people who rely on the support of close friends rather than relatives.

One point of contention in the lawsuit is whether a hospital has a legal duty to its patients to always give visiting rights to their designated family members and surrogates.
Stay turned for an interesting, evolving area of healthcare, family, and patient-rights law.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Celebrity, privacy, and inelegant charitable solicitation

By now, nearly everyone knows that actress Farrah Fawcett has serious cancer, and the media have reported on her every twitch. The L.A. Times ran this piece about how her medical privacy was breached for the sake of tabloid news and how her treating hospital asked for a large donation from her for a cancer foundation.

In an interview with the Times (given last August, but green-lighted by Fawcett recently), "Fawcett described how she was deprived of the choice that most other cancer patients have: when, and even whether, to share information with family, friends or strangers."

In the time since the interview, the hospital employee who leaked the information was criminally prosecuted and convicted, the medical center has attempted to remedy its policy, and the governor of California has signed a stricter medical privacy law.

On the topic of the solicited donation, the story notes:
The university went so far as to give her a prewritten letter that she could sign and fill in a dollar amount for the foundation, documents show. It also created an official-looking proposed announcement that said, "Ms. Farrah Fawcett has established a fund in the Division of Digestive Diseases with the expansive goal of facilitating prevention and diagnosis in gastrointestinal cancers."

The uncertain definition of "competence"

The excellent entries continue on "The New Old Age." Here is the discussion on mental competence, the legal way of determining whether someone has the cognitive ability to make decisions for oneself, usually meaning signing documents. Often, that determination varies even by the type of decision to be made: for example, voting, making a will, or entering into marriage may all have different thresholds for "competence."

The entry in "The New Old Age" considers competence in the context of non-deceased wealthy philanthropist Brooke Astor's later years when she had Alzheimer's disease. Here's a bit of the entry:
. . . Alzheimer’s sufferers may experience days of comparative lucidity alternating with days of bewilderment. Cognitive ability “may even vary throughout the day,” said Dr. Ronald C. Petersen, a neurologist at the Mayo Clinic who chairs the medical and scientific advisory board of the Alzheimer’s Association. “A person might be
relatively sharp in the morning and by evening be quite confused.”

Caregivers are familiar with the late-day agitation called “sundowning.” Medications, disrupted sleep, social stimulation and even a minor cold can affect these diurnal cycles. Though a variety of doctors are expected to testify during the two-month trial, they may shed little light on whether Mrs. Astor had, in legalspeak, “testamentary capacity” on a particular January afternoon in 2004, when she altered her will.

. . .

The bar for establishing testamentary capacity is set fairly low. The person in question needs to have a general understanding of her assets, know to whom bequests are normally left, and be able to state what she wants to do and explain why.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Prominent New York case draws attention to financial abuse of the elderly

Financial exploitation of the elderly is a problem that has received growing attention in recent years. A recent post to the excellent New York Times blog, "The New Old Age," considered how elusive detection of such abuse is, in light of the pending case in New York regarding the estate of Brooke Astor, her son, and the son's attorney.

According to the piece, "[m]ost cases involving suspected financial exploitation of the elderly . . . are never prosecuted and probably never discovered." Here are a few reasons why:

1. The elderly person may be isolated from others who would be in a position to detect abuse. Isolation may be from poor health and mobility, shrinking social circle, or imposed by the abuser.


2. Defining financial abuse can be elusive. Some action may indeed be abusive, but others may be well-intended, but just done in poor judgement. The Times post notes that, "[t]rying to specify exactly what behavior constitutes elder abuse . . . remains a shadowy, insufficiently investigated subject."

3. Abusers can be family members, so then the abuse is often unreported because of the closed circle of those involved. A study cited in the post found "that the most likely perpetrators are family members, friends and caregivers, who feel entitled to take funds because of their established relationship."

4. In our legal system, recourse is often expensive and may take a long time. If the funds stolen are not significant (say, over $10,000), it may be cost-prohibitive to litigate under civil law or persuade the district attorney to prosecute under criminal law. Further complicating matters, with an elderly victim, they may not wish to give testimony (or be mentally competent to), or they may have died before a case can be resolved.

Fortunately, many states, including Wisconsin, have recently enacted tougher statutes against financial exploitation of elderly or other at-risk adults. In addition, agencies and task forces have been formed or empowered to address abuse.

Whether through government, non-profit entitities, or personal vigilence, the awareness and prevention of elder abuse (of all types) is improving, but requires involvement on everyone's part.

As the Times post ends with a quotation from the president of NAELA (National Acadamy of Elder Law Attorneys): "A sensational case like this, or the Terry Schiavo case, hits the hot button and helps make people aware that there could be a problem and that they should protect themselves."