What does it mean to be "alive"? When we consider someone who is severely compromised by disability to be "alive" (or not) as a legal matter, what follows from the determination? If we "keep them alive" (sounds God-like), what dignity do we accord them if they are in vegetative or minimally conscious states? How do we treat them?
Oliver Sacks, whose death today is so painful to contemplate, taught the world an unforgettable lesson with his Awakenings patients and, indeed, with each patient he saw, each book he wrote and by his personal example of endless compassion. He taught us that there is always a person inside, behind the disfigurement, behind the mask of disability, behind the cruelties of disease and the indignities of decline.
Joe Fins, with his indispensable book, Rights Come to Mind, has pursued this conversation about grave illness and personal dignity into the intimate family conference, the doctor-patient relationship and even the courtroom, in a dramatic manner.
I repeat -- this book is indispensable. Everyone knows of someone who has been in a coma or vegetative state, perhaps even a persistent vegetative state. However, as Joe has shown repeatedly, not all vegetative states, even persistent ones, are permanent, and it is possible to recover from a vegetative state to a minimally conscious state and thereafter to emerge from a minimally conscious to a fully conscious state. My own beloved father was in a minimally conscious state for months, and I assure you, there is a world of difference, too seldom recognized, between being vegetative and being minimally conscious. Not to mention the difference between persistent and permanent vegetative states.
The stories in this book are remarkable, and you will not be the same after reading them. Suffice to say, there is more to being alive -- vibrantly, fully alive -- than meets the eye.
Rights Come to Mind: Brain Injury, Ethics, and the Struggle for Consciousness 1st Edition
by
Joseph J. Fins
(Author)
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ISBN-13: 978-0521715379
ISBN-10: 0521715377
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Through the sobering story of Maggie Worthen, and her mother, Nancy, this book tells of one family's struggle with severe brain injury and how developments in neuroscience call for a reconsideration of what society owes patients at the edge of consciousness. Drawing upon over fifty in-depth family interviews, the history of severe brain injury from Quinlan to Schiavo, and his participation in landmark clinical trials, such as the first use of deep brain stimulation in the minimally conscious state, Joseph J. Fins captures the paradox of medical and societal neglect even as advances in neuroscience suggest new ways to mend the broken brain. Responding to the dire care provided to these marginalized patients, after heroically being saved, Fins places society's obligations to patients with severe injury within the historical legacy of the civil and disability rights movements, offering a stirring synthesis of public policy and physician advocacy.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"As the mother of a daughter with severe brain injury and an advocate for patients like her, I found Rights Come to Mind to be a compassionate call to action and a must-read. It should be thoroughly studied by families, professionals, and policy makers concerned about these patients. In every chapter and on every page, Dr Fins uses his knowledge of neuroethics and disorders of consciousness to broaden the civil rights of patients too long neglected, writing truly in the spirit of the Americans with Disabilities Act."
Marilyn Price Spivack, mother of Deborah Lee Price, cofounder of the Brain Injury Association of America, and Neuro-Trauma Outreach Coordinator at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
"Dr Fins has written a powerful and ethically challenging book that introduces the science of severe brain injury in the context of the stories of families committed to the recoveries of their loved ones. Dr Fins knows this difficult terrain firsthand as the ethicist member of a team that has pioneered technologies intended to engage the conscious thoughts of individuals rendered by their injuries unable to communicate or even move."
Steven E. Hyman, Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor and Director of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
"Dr Fins brilliantly captures the despair of families with brain-injured loved ones who are navigating Dante’s rings of hell. He gives voice to those of us who choose to stand and fight for our loved ones. Rights Come to Mind aligns expectations, treatment, and nuance both at the bedside and in public policy."
Bob Woodruff, ABC News Correspondent, and Lee Woodruff, authors of In an Instant
"Dr Fins has provided us with a wonderful book that masterfully integrates the clinical and ethical challenges faced by medical care providers along with a deep empathy for the challenges faced by patients and their families. Above all this volume is a call, even a demand, to do better. I strongly recommend this thoughtful, readable, deeply informed, and challenging volume."
Harold T. Shapiro, President Emeritus of Princeton University and former Chair of the National Bioethics Advisory Commission
"Rights Come to Mind is a beautiful book that blends science, humanity, morality, and law to paint a far more nuanced picture of severe brain injury than ever before. The book teaches, moves, and provokes as it sets out its vision for the rights of this long-ignored population."
Abbe R. Gluck, Yale Law School
"Joseph J. Fins has woven a unique narrative covering both the science of unconsciousness and the lives of brain-injured patients. He offers readers detailed case reports, stories of illness based on extensive interviews with patients' family members, medical and scientific explanations of coma and the vegetative and minimally conscious states, critical commentaries, and an ethical and legal argument for the importance of advocating for the rights of this group or ignored and disadvantaged patients … [Fins] is ideally poised to write this account … [His] erudition in palliative care, ethics, and humanities is evident … This is a highly personal work that illustrates both the individual impact of brain injury and the current deficits in the care of brain-injured patients. By successfully outlining both the human and humane dimensions of a scientific subject, the narrative bridges the gap between the sciences and the humanities …"
James L. Bernat, Neurology Today
"Although not lacking in technical detail, Fins humanizes people with disorders of consciousness by describing a number of case studies in addition to Maggie's. This makes for a book that has broad interest and appeal, engaging both those readers who are interested in traumatic brain injury and those who relish the latest research and treatment. For readers at all levels of expertise and sophistication, this book is an interesting and often fascinating read."
Elizabeth V. Swenson, PsycCRITIQUES
"Fins offers an impassioned plea for the rights of those suffering in MCS, invoking the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement. Here lies the casus belli of his work: a belief that MCS patients are being lumped together with PVS patients and denied their rights to participation in the community of humankind … Rights Come to Mind is a multifaceted tour de force not to be missed."
Jacob M. Appel, Education Update Online
"Fins is a zealous advocate for the rights of those suffering impaired consciousness, and he sees an institutional injustice that demands change. For attorneys representing people with a brain injury and their families, this is an essential guide to medical and ethical dilemmas."
Shana De Caro, Trial
"Fins moves quickly beyond the profit and loss columns of conventional health care costs to invoke rights to adequate assessment and rescue, to a rehabilitation program adaptable to a variable time course of recover, and to being treated as a human being with (potentially but not always actually) a voice … We should take up the responsibility to reveal a world of human experience into which many of us, despite ourselves, may one day find ourselves plunged. It behooves us to listen to that voice and add our own, crying in the wilderness for those who cannot find themselves there."
Grant Gillet, Hastings Center Report
"Rights Come to Mind is a compelling discussion of the actual lives of patients at the edge of consciousness, as well as the experiences of those caring for them. The book is a valuable resource for anyone interested in the medical, social, and personal dimensions of severe brain injury and resulting disorders of consciousness. Those directly and indirectly affected by these disorders, and indeed all of us, are indebted to Fins for presenting and assessing these dimensions in an informative, thoughtful and humane way."
Walter Glannon, The American Journal of Bioethics
"Rights Come to Mind is one of those rare works and may conceivably become an instant classic on the ethics of brain injury and disorders of consciousness … The substantial intellectual grace and deep humanity that pervade every part of the book are a testimony to the scholarly excellence and exceptional academic generosity of its author … [This book] marks a major milestone in the contemporary scholarship on the ethics of disorders of consciousness, in the narrative approach to medical ethnography, and in patients’ rights advocacy. It is safe to predict that it will become a work of reference and reverence for everyone who is interested in these topics for many years to come."
Philipp Kellmeyer, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics
'Joseph Fins has made contributions (to bioethics) of the utmost importance. It is enough to cite two, his works … on clinical pragmatism and on the other, efforts to improve and dignify the care of patients at the end of life … The title of Rights Come to Mind expresses the book’s fundamental purpose: to denounce the way people suffering from prolonged loss of consciousness have been treated … This recently published volume is situated in line with that fundamental interest of Fins to dignify the lives of persons afflicted with grave or terminal illness … For Fins, the right to recover lost consciousness is a moral imperative, and consequentially a fundamental right of being human…the book ends with that call to action.' Diego Gracia Guillén, translated from EIDON
"A fascinating new book [which] carefully illustrates … that predicting the course of any of the disorders of consciousness is not a binary, definitive-cure-versus-quick-death matter; instead, the existence, extent, and rate of each person’s recovery varies along a continuum that often includes multiple gray zones … the radical question that Fins forces us to address is precisely what, if any thing, we should be doing with the MCS population … the central message … is a profoundly disruptive one for certain parts of the health care system, and that fully is the book’s intent … [it] will properly shake up settled understandings and attitudes held toward a largely neglected but worthy segment of our population …"
Marshall R. Kapp, Care Management Journals
'Fins provides a fair and comprehensive overview of the historical, biological, technological, social, and political contexts surrounding TBI and MCS patients, while also acting as an advocate for patients and their families.' Michael Roess, The Pharos
Marilyn Price Spivack, mother of Deborah Lee Price, cofounder of the Brain Injury Association of America, and Neuro-Trauma Outreach Coordinator at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
"Dr Fins has written a powerful and ethically challenging book that introduces the science of severe brain injury in the context of the stories of families committed to the recoveries of their loved ones. Dr Fins knows this difficult terrain firsthand as the ethicist member of a team that has pioneered technologies intended to engage the conscious thoughts of individuals rendered by their injuries unable to communicate or even move."
Steven E. Hyman, Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor and Director of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
"Dr Fins brilliantly captures the despair of families with brain-injured loved ones who are navigating Dante’s rings of hell. He gives voice to those of us who choose to stand and fight for our loved ones. Rights Come to Mind aligns expectations, treatment, and nuance both at the bedside and in public policy."
Bob Woodruff, ABC News Correspondent, and Lee Woodruff, authors of In an Instant
"Dr Fins has provided us with a wonderful book that masterfully integrates the clinical and ethical challenges faced by medical care providers along with a deep empathy for the challenges faced by patients and their families. Above all this volume is a call, even a demand, to do better. I strongly recommend this thoughtful, readable, deeply informed, and challenging volume."
Harold T. Shapiro, President Emeritus of Princeton University and former Chair of the National Bioethics Advisory Commission
"Rights Come to Mind is a beautiful book that blends science, humanity, morality, and law to paint a far more nuanced picture of severe brain injury than ever before. The book teaches, moves, and provokes as it sets out its vision for the rights of this long-ignored population."
Abbe R. Gluck, Yale Law School
"Joseph J. Fins has woven a unique narrative covering both the science of unconsciousness and the lives of brain-injured patients. He offers readers detailed case reports, stories of illness based on extensive interviews with patients' family members, medical and scientific explanations of coma and the vegetative and minimally conscious states, critical commentaries, and an ethical and legal argument for the importance of advocating for the rights of this group or ignored and disadvantaged patients … [Fins] is ideally poised to write this account … [His] erudition in palliative care, ethics, and humanities is evident … This is a highly personal work that illustrates both the individual impact of brain injury and the current deficits in the care of brain-injured patients. By successfully outlining both the human and humane dimensions of a scientific subject, the narrative bridges the gap between the sciences and the humanities …"
James L. Bernat, Neurology Today
"Although not lacking in technical detail, Fins humanizes people with disorders of consciousness by describing a number of case studies in addition to Maggie's. This makes for a book that has broad interest and appeal, engaging both those readers who are interested in traumatic brain injury and those who relish the latest research and treatment. For readers at all levels of expertise and sophistication, this book is an interesting and often fascinating read."
Elizabeth V. Swenson, PsycCRITIQUES
"Fins offers an impassioned plea for the rights of those suffering in MCS, invoking the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement. Here lies the casus belli of his work: a belief that MCS patients are being lumped together with PVS patients and denied their rights to participation in the community of humankind … Rights Come to Mind is a multifaceted tour de force not to be missed."
Jacob M. Appel, Education Update Online
"Fins is a zealous advocate for the rights of those suffering impaired consciousness, and he sees an institutional injustice that demands change. For attorneys representing people with a brain injury and their families, this is an essential guide to medical and ethical dilemmas."
Shana De Caro, Trial
"Fins moves quickly beyond the profit and loss columns of conventional health care costs to invoke rights to adequate assessment and rescue, to a rehabilitation program adaptable to a variable time course of recover, and to being treated as a human being with (potentially but not always actually) a voice … We should take up the responsibility to reveal a world of human experience into which many of us, despite ourselves, may one day find ourselves plunged. It behooves us to listen to that voice and add our own, crying in the wilderness for those who cannot find themselves there."
Grant Gillet, Hastings Center Report
"Rights Come to Mind is a compelling discussion of the actual lives of patients at the edge of consciousness, as well as the experiences of those caring for them. The book is a valuable resource for anyone interested in the medical, social, and personal dimensions of severe brain injury and resulting disorders of consciousness. Those directly and indirectly affected by these disorders, and indeed all of us, are indebted to Fins for presenting and assessing these dimensions in an informative, thoughtful and humane way."
Walter Glannon, The American Journal of Bioethics
"Rights Come to Mind is one of those rare works and may conceivably become an instant classic on the ethics of brain injury and disorders of consciousness … The substantial intellectual grace and deep humanity that pervade every part of the book are a testimony to the scholarly excellence and exceptional academic generosity of its author … [This book] marks a major milestone in the contemporary scholarship on the ethics of disorders of consciousness, in the narrative approach to medical ethnography, and in patients’ rights advocacy. It is safe to predict that it will become a work of reference and reverence for everyone who is interested in these topics for many years to come."
Philipp Kellmeyer, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics
'Joseph Fins has made contributions (to bioethics) of the utmost importance. It is enough to cite two, his works … on clinical pragmatism and on the other, efforts to improve and dignify the care of patients at the end of life … The title of Rights Come to Mind expresses the book’s fundamental purpose: to denounce the way people suffering from prolonged loss of consciousness have been treated … This recently published volume is situated in line with that fundamental interest of Fins to dignify the lives of persons afflicted with grave or terminal illness … For Fins, the right to recover lost consciousness is a moral imperative, and consequentially a fundamental right of being human…the book ends with that call to action.' Diego Gracia Guillén, translated from EIDON
"A fascinating new book [which] carefully illustrates … that predicting the course of any of the disorders of consciousness is not a binary, definitive-cure-versus-quick-death matter; instead, the existence, extent, and rate of each person’s recovery varies along a continuum that often includes multiple gray zones … the radical question that Fins forces us to address is precisely what, if any thing, we should be doing with the MCS population … the central message … is a profoundly disruptive one for certain parts of the health care system, and that fully is the book’s intent … [it] will properly shake up settled understandings and attitudes held toward a largely neglected but worthy segment of our population …"
Marshall R. Kapp, Care Management Journals
'Fins provides a fair and comprehensive overview of the historical, biological, technological, social, and political contexts surrounding TBI and MCS patients, while also acting as an advocate for patients and their families.' Michael Roess, The Pharos
Book Description
Joseph J. Fins calls for a reconsideration of severe brain injury treatment, including discussion of public policy and physician advocacy.
About the Author
Joseph J. Fins, MD, MACP is the E. William Davis, Jr, MD Professor of Medical Ethics and Chief of the Division of Medical Ethics at Weill Cornell Medical College, where he also serves as Professor of Medicine, Professor of Health Care Policy and Research, and Professor of Medicine in Psychiatry. He is the founding chair of the Ethics Committee of New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell Medical Center where he is an attending physician and Director of Medical Ethics. Dr Fins co-directs the Consortium for the Advanced Study of Brain Injury (CASBI) and is an adjunct faculty member and senior attending physician at the Rockefeller University and Rockefeller University Hospital. The author of over 250 publications, Fins is a co-author of the landmark 2007 Nature paper describing the first use of deep brain stimulation in the minimally conscious state. He is an elected Member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and an Academico de Honor of the Royal National Academy of Medicine of Spain.
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Product details
- Publisher : Cambridge University Press; 1st edition (August 11, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 394 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0521715377
- ISBN-13 : 978-0521715379
- Item Weight : 1.19 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.98 x 0.83 x 9.02 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #635,989 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #128 in Medical Ethics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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4.6 out of 5 stars
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5.0 out of 5 stars
What is the meaning of "life"? Joe Fins, Oliver Sacks and the rights of vegetative and minimally conscious patients
Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2015Verified Purchase
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Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2015
Verified Purchase
Very well-written and informative on a wide range of brain injury issues. I bought this because a friend sustained a severe traumatic brain injury in May of 2014, and I've been trying to be useful to his family by learning as much as I can about his injury, recovery and treatment options. Thankfully, Philip has progressed beyond the minimally conscious state, but many of the discussions here are, nonetheless, highly relevant. I learned a lot of things that will be useful in helping his family make important care decisions going forward. If you have a friend or loved one who recently sustained a severe TBI, I encourage you to read this book. If you've been dealing with a TBI in your family or circle of friends for some time, you may still find much of this book helpful and interesting.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2017
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This is a book that should change the way insurers cover rehabilitation for TBI persons. We need to do so much more work to bring them to be the best they can be. And a shoutout to their amazing advocates. Thank you Dr. Fins
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Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2021
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Read it and learn what they can't tell you.
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2016
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The author discussed this book as the key-note speaker at a conference I recently attended--quite fascinating! Dr. Fins is an excellent speaker, and he clearly cares about patients and their families.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2016
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Rights Come to Mind is a great book for those interested in brain injury, ethnography, and bioethics. It guides a reader through complex medical, ethical, and legal issues using a framework that is easily accessible and moving. By anchoring these issues through personal narratives of individuals and their families who have experienced severe brain injury, the book is engaging and easy to read. It provides useful perspectives for medical and health care professionals, families, and the general public in how we treat marginalized and vulnerable populations and what efforts can be done to help these patients and their families. As someone who is not in the medical field or does not know anyone who has experienced brain injury, the book still offers many insights that will be useful in my personal and professional lives. I highly recommend this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2015
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Dr Fins clearly explains the human side of caring for a person with a chronic medical illness who is segregated and has been given diminished rights. He weaves the burgeoning science that continues to give us new knowledge that creates benefits and burdens. He leaves us with the societal burden to give patients with problems of consciousness the right to appropriate care. A very worthwhile read.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2015
This is a quietly radical book. It is at one level the history of recent changes in neurology's ability to accurately diagnose deep brain injuries, recognize differences of consciousness and then, in later chapters, treat them. At another it is an indictment of serious deficiencies in the U.S. healthcare system in relation to patients with these injuries. It documents in passing, quietly but damningly, the organ transplant officials seeking organs even when a patient's family is not ready to give up; the medical personnel who conspire in this unwholesome activity, and more generally the manner in which clinical guidelines stack the deck against patients and their families. Finally, at a broader level, this is a book that could only be written by an experienced neurologist whose concerns for ethical practice and treatment are as deep as those attending to clinical concerns. Unusually, in this ethic, Fins gives full voice to the familial caregivers of deep brain injury patients both as members of the care partnership and as persons needing help who are too often ignored. If there is a complaint it is that the book's critiques are soto voice. It should be read, however, as a clarion call for an engaged clinical and social ethic of care whose results are life affirming, life preserving, and life enhancing.
Tom Koch is a bioethicist and gerontologist engaged in chronic and palliative care.
Tom Koch is a bioethicist and gerontologist engaged in chronic and palliative care.
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Top reviews from other countries
David. Turnbull
5.0 out of 5 stars
I welcome the views of medics brave enough to acknowledge the poor prognostic ability for recovery for this group
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 2, 2015Verified Purchase
I work in neurosurgical intensive care and I am responsible for the care of brain injured patients. This book has helped me understand the difficulties families face dealing with a health care system reluctant to work with severely brain injured patients.
I welcome the views of medics brave enough to acknowledge the poor prognostic ability for recovery for this group. I am better able to face the challenges that families and patients bring
I welcome the views of medics brave enough to acknowledge the poor prognostic ability for recovery for this group. I am better able to face the challenges that families and patients bring
One person found this helpful
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Mark Holloway
5.0 out of 5 stars
Simply brilliant
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 10, 2016Verified Purchase
It is hard to describe a book that charts the struggle for the understanding of very severe brain injury, the sort that leads to prolonged if not a lifetime loss of consciousness. This is part history, part-ethnography and part a call to arms to end the segregation and poor treatment of individuals who exist in a plane that we do not understand and yet we judge and dispatch to the far reaches of society, hidden from view.
Fins is an academic and yet this book is written in a style that will have much wider appeal, the narrative threads that are interwoven into the story (for it is in many ways a story) act to anchor the reader to reality, the knowledge that some of the protagonists go on to make changes considered impossible (and conversely some do not) adds a momentum to the book, it becomes a page-turner accordingly.
I could not recommend this highly enough, I need a 6 star function!
Fins is an academic and yet this book is written in a style that will have much wider appeal, the narrative threads that are interwoven into the story (for it is in many ways a story) act to anchor the reader to reality, the knowledge that some of the protagonists go on to make changes considered impossible (and conversely some do not) adds a momentum to the book, it becomes a page-turner accordingly.
I could not recommend this highly enough, I need a 6 star function!




