Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
NHS staff told ‘do not resuscitate’ COVID-19 patients with learning disabilities
NHS staff told ‘do not resuscitate’ COVID-19 patients with learning disabilities
Mar 3, 2026 9:16 PM

After a year-long legal battle, a British hospital apologized for placing 51-year-old Andrew Waters under a “Do Not Resuscitate” order without his family’s consent during his 2011 hospital stay, because he suffered from Down syndrome and “learning difficulties.” A disturbing news report shows that doctors have placed blanket “Do Not Resuscitate” (DNR) orders against people with learning disabilities in order to mitigate an NHS shortage of medical supplies during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mencap, a group that advocates for those with cognitive conditions, told The Guardian that doctors with the UK’s National Health Service instructed hospital staff to do nothing if COVID-19 patients with learning disabilities went into cardiac arrest; their treatment order was to let the patients die. Usually, DNR orders only apply to those too weak for CPR to help. However, that did not apply to the vast majority of these DNR orders, which were inserted into medical files without the knowledge or consent of the patients or their families – sometimes without consulting with other staff.

These stealth DNR orders are “unexploded landmines,” said Jackie O’Sullivan, an advocate for those with learning disabilities, because “you don’t know whether you’ve got one until you need the treatment.”

The scale is not yet known, but one organization that offers care to people with learning disabilities said it received more “unlawful” DNR orders last April than it did in a typical year. “Making an advance decision not to administer CPR if a person’s heart stops, solely because they have a learning disability, is not only illegal, it is an outrage,” said Julie Bass, CEO of Turning Point (not to be confused with the conservative activist group).

While a government report is due out shortly, “inappropriate” DNR orders caused avoidable deaths last year, according to the Care Quality Commission.

The DNRs may explain why COVID-19 caused 65% of all deaths among people with cognitive issues since the UK’s second lockdown began. People with learning disabilities are 6.3 times more likely to die of COVID-19, and young people in the 18-to-34 demographic are 30 times more likely to lose their lives to the virus, according to a study released last November by Public Health England, a government agency.

Statistics show women with learning disabilities – who already die 28 years younger than their counterparts – suffer the worst health es under the NHS’s COVID-19 regime.

Targeting those who are already at risk has drawn strong rebuke from religious and moral authorities.

“This is eugenics thinking: pure, simple, and crass – a denial of human exceptionalism and the equal moral worth of every person,” blogged Wesley J. Smith, a contributor to Religion & Liberty, at National Review.

This is eugenics and it is revolting.

— Dr. Angela Rasmussen (@angie_rasmussen) February 14, 2021

The Roman Catholic bishops of England and Wales said they were “distressed” by the orders, which violated the “God-given dignity” of all human life “from the moment of conception until natural death.” Jewish charities also noted the “halachic implication” of healthcare decisions.

“Why have the vulnerable been targeted when they should be protected?”asked Rev. Patrick Pullicino, a neurologist subsequently ordained a Roman Catholic priest. “We need to find out what has gone wrong in the NHS and why this is happening.”

Yet he told the Catholic News Agency the proximate reason: The glut of DNRs against people with learning disabilities “directly stems from the COVID-19critical care referral algorithm, which mentions those with learning disabilities or autism with the under 65-year-olds as being potentially frail and therefore not in line for ITU [Intensive Care Unit] care.”

A nameless, faceless algorithm – and the “unlawful” actions of some doctors – condemned innocent people to an avoidable death in order to conserve the nation’s always-strained healthcare resources.

Concerns about finite supplies and treatments span the globe. The Trump administration’s Office for Civil Rights forced Alabama to rescind an order withholding ventilators from coronavirus patients with “profound mental retardation.” Yet while the U.S. system quickly rebounded, the NHS has only moved out of the highest possible threat rating, Level 5, on Thursday.

Rationing is the inevitable e of a national or single-payer healthcare system. Socialized medicine must grapple with patients’ infinite demand of the limited supply of doctors and medicine. Artificial delays in scheduling “elective” surgeries, long emergency room wait times, and limited treatment options follow. Its supporters cry the system is “underfunded,” yet no amount of money can fund infinity. Thus, the system cuts off services to the most vulnerable, the least powerful, and most in need of help – the poor, elderly, and disabled. No wonder the top source of government bribery in Western Europe takes place within national healthcare systems, according to Transparency International.

Thanks to these economic realities, the NHS is perpetually strained-at-the-seams. The British Red Cross said that NHS care amounted to a “humanitarian crisis” in January 2018. Each “winter crisis” seems worse than the last, pre-COVID. Despite its mediocre-to-poor performance, the NHS retains a near-religious status among the British people. Some NHS doctors now believe their duties confer the divine prerogative of choosing some lives over others.

“If true, heads should roll!” wrote Smith of the latest NHS rationing scandal.

Yet the British government seems resistant to offer any relief. Parliament rejected a petition to “change the ‘do not resuscitate’ orders on patients with learning difficulties,” because “it’s not clear what the petition is asking the UK Government or Parliament to do.” In the past, the NHS has used the courts to enforce decrees that end patients’ lives. The single-payer system sued and won a court injunction forcing a young Catholic woman with learning disabilities to have an abortion, although the order was thankfully overturned.

The NHS not only denied all care to Alfie Evans andCharlie Gard but then sued to prevent their parents from seeking healthcare for their own children elsewhere – even from no-cost providers personally arranged by Pope Francis. Control of healthcare gave the government an aura of omniscience capable of dictating the best life-and-death circumstances of all 67 million Britons.

The hesitancy to act on this scandal, which has been public since last spring, is all the more perplexing, because it violates official government policy. UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock and NHS leaders in England repeatedly instructed doctors not to place blanket DNRs in patients’ files, insisting all diagnoses be made on a case-by-case basis.

The NHS opposed these orders; nevertheless, they have pervaded the UK for nearly a year. The NHS may operate on the best of intentions, yet the economic incentives and realities of scarcity produce rationing that better reflects a culture of death. Life-denying directives are handed down with little transparency and even less legal recourse.

As plans for greater nationalization of U.S. healthcare percolate through the Capitol, people on both sides of the Atlantic would do well to heed these lessons.

Under a national healthcare system, we all run the risk of ing Andrew Waters.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Radio Free Acton: Perspectives on Health Care Reform, Part 2
This week Radio Free Acton continues its discussion on healthcare reform. Dr. Donald P. Condit and Dr. Kevin Schmiesing are back, along with host Marc VanderMaas, to talk about alternatives to the current health care proposal and ideas for reforming the system in ways that will both increase the availability of care for all who need it and make economic sense. [audio: If you are not already subscribed to this podcast, here’s the link you’ll want to use to have...
Announcement: A Caritas in Veritate Reader
In response to the ongoing interest in Pope Benedict’s new encyclical, the Acton Institute is readying the publication of Caritas in Veritate — A Reader. This encyclical, in all of its remarkable depth, will no doubt be the subject of thoughtful analysis for a long time e. Later this summer, Acton will gather the best of its mentary on Caritas and selected articles from other observers in a single volume that will be available in hard copy and in a...
Karen Laub-Novak, RIP
The Acton Institute, and I personally, have lost one of our most enduring and earliest friends in the peaceful (and I am told, beautiful – if such a word can be used) death of Karen Laub-Novak, wife of our long-time collaborator and mentor Michael Novak. During the time I lived in Washington, D.C., some 25 years ago, the Novak dinner table became a veritable salon of the free society. As Michael would be mixing up his magical Manhattans (where I...
Caritas in Veritate — One Month Later
Headline Bistro, a news service of the Knights of Columbus, published a new roundup mentary on Pope Benedict’s Caritas in Veritate encyclical. I am joined in “Catholic Thinkers Reflect on Caritas in Veritate” by Michael Novak, Kirk Doran and Carl Anderson. Here’s the introduction and the article, which was written by Elizabeth Hansen: Last month, Pope Benedict XVI released his much-anticipated social encyclical, Caritas in Veritate. While it addressed the global economic crisis and the need for reform in business...
On Calvinism and Capitalism
I don’t much like the term Calvinism. I think it is historically unhelpful, and in general prefer to use something like Reformed theology or speak about the Reformed confessions, depending on the particular context. And I don’t much like the term capitalism, preferring instead to discuss the market economy, or perhaps, in light of the results below, free enterprise. But while popular and intellectual usage certainly prefers the use of the former term (even if it often is caricatured or...
The Right to Health Care is Wrong
History shows us that civil rights can exist as nothing more than legal fiction. Take, for example, the right to vote. Although suffrage was extended to African-Americans under the Constitution in 1870, that right was little more than a nice idea until the Voting Rights Act of 1965. With many activists and politicians calling for America to recognize the “right” to health care, it is well worth looking at what this means. Making promises that cannot be met is a...
Money, Greed and God on Bible Answer Man
The Bible Answer Man is in the middle of an extended, two day interview of Jay Richards, about Jay’s new book, Money, Greed and God: Why Capitalism is the Solution and Not the Problem. It’s the most in-depth discussion of the book I’ve encountered on the internet, and Hank Hanegraaff’s introduction alone makes it worth a listen. Yesterday’s interview is here. Today’s interview will stream here. ...
Acton Commentary: Corruption, Communism, and Catholicism in Vietnam
When the Berlin Wall fell in November 1989, that event visibly marked the collapse of a Communist ideology that had oppressed, tortured and killed millions for decades. But now, 20 years later, Communist authorities are once again taking aim at an old target — the Christian Church. Samuel Gregg looks at the alarming persecution of Roman Catholics in Vietnam in mentary, “Corruption, Communism, and Catholicism in Vietnam.” Gregg articulates the horrifying reasons for the continued persecution that Catholics in Vietnam...
A Checkered Future?
Chester E. Finn Jr. served with William J. Bennett [The Book of Virtues et al] in The Department of Education under President Reagan from 1985 to 1988 — that point in Reagan’s presidency when the talk of shutting down the Department had been abandoned. Bennett has often quipped about his tenure while SecEd as one where he stood at the ship’s wheel turning it from starboard to port all the while not realizing that the cables connecting the wheel with...
The City Online
As promised, the Summer 2009 issue of The City is now available online. In addition to my review of Blind Spot, this issue includes a host of noteworthy items, including Wilfred McClay’s essay, “The Soul & The City,” and a review by HBU provost Paul Bonicelli of Dead Aid: Why Aid is Not Working and How There is a Better Way for Africa, by Dambisa Moyo. Bonicelli, formerly an assistant administrator for USAID, discusses how his own experience as a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved