Master Massachusetts' high court held that an incompetent patient's guardian may, under substituted judgment, discontinue artificial nutrition and hydration, recognizing tube feeding as medical treatment and permitting withdrawal or transfer over a hospital's moral objections. with this comprehensive case brief.
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hospital is a landmark Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision at the intersection of health law, bioethics, and constitutional privacy. Building on the Commonwealth's substituted judgment jurisprudence from Saikewicz and Spring, Brophy squarely addressed whether artificial nutrition and hydration—administered through a gastrostomy tube to a patient in a persistent vegetative state—constitute medical treatment that may be declined on the patient's behalf. The court answered yes, outlining how a guardian may exercise the patient's right to refuse life-sustaining treatment and clarifying the limits of countervailing state interests.
The case is especially significant because it resolved two critical controversies of the 1980s "right-to-die" era. First, it confirmed that tube feeding is not categorically different from other forms of medical intervention and is therefore subject to refusal like any other treatment. Second, it recognized that while individual clinicians and institutions may have conscientious objections to participating in treatment withdrawal, such objections cannot thwart a patient's legally protected choice; transfer to a willing provider must be allowed. For law students, Brophy provides a canonical application of substituted judgment, a careful balancing of state interests, and a template for judicial remedies in end-of-life disputes.
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hospital, Inc., 398 Mass. 417, 497 N.E.2d 626 (Mass. 1986)
Paul Brophy, a middle-aged man, suffered a catastrophic rupture of a cerebral blood vessel in 1983 that left him in a persistent vegetative state (PVS). He breathed spontaneously and exhibited brain stem function but had no consciousness or capacity for decision-making. Physicians agreed there was no reasonable prospect of recovery. To sustain him, clinicians placed a gastrostomy tube to deliver artificial nutrition and hydration. Brophy had previously expressed to family members that he would not want to be kept alive in such a condition by artificial means if there was no hope of meaningful recovery. His wife, acting as his court-appointed guardian, petitioned to discontinue tube feeding based on those known wishes. New England Sinai Hospital, a long-term care facility, refused to remove or cap the feeding tube on ethical grounds, contending that withdrawal would directly cause death by starvation and amounted to impermissible euthanasia. After proceedings in the Probate Court, which recognized evidence of Brophy's likely preference but declined to order withdrawal, the case reached the Supreme Judicial Court. The SJC considered whether the guardian could exercise substituted judgment to discontinue artificial nutrition and hydration and whether the hospital could be compelled to comply or at least permit transfer to a willing provider.
May a guardian, exercising substituted judgment on behalf of an incompetent patient in a persistent vegetative state, direct the discontinuation of artificial nutrition and hydration delivered by gastrostomy tube; and, if so, can a hospital that objects on moral or ethical grounds be required to comply or, at minimum, allow transfer so the decision can be effectuated elsewhere?
Under Massachusetts law, an incompetent person retains a common-law and constitutional right to refuse medical treatment, which may be exercised through the doctrine of substituted judgment when the patient's actual wishes can be ascertained with reasonable certainty. Artificial nutrition and hydration constitute medical treatment subject to refusal. Countervailing state interests—preservation of life, prevention of suicide, protection of third parties, and maintenance of medical ethical integrity—must be balanced against the patient's rights; when those interests are minimal and the patient's likely choice is clear, the patient's rights prevail. While providers with conscientious objections need not personally participate in the withdrawal, they may not obstruct the patient's lawful choice and must allow transfer to a willing provider.
Yes. Applying substituted judgment, the court concluded that Mr. Brophy would choose to refuse artificial nutrition and hydration under his circumstances. Artificial feeding is medical treatment that may be declined. The hospital need not itself remove the gastrostomy tube if it has conscientious objections, but it may not impede implementation of the decision; it must allow transfer to a facility or personnel willing to carry out the withdrawal.
The court began by reaffirming that incompetent patients do not lose the fundamental right to refuse medical treatment; instead, courts use substituted judgment to approximate the decision the patient would make if competent. Relying on prior Massachusetts cases—Superintendent of Belchertown State School v. Saikewicz and Matter of Spring—the SJC emphasized the importance of the patient's values, prior statements, and preferences in determining whether continued treatment aligns with that person's conception of dignity and quality of life. Credible testimony established that Brophy had said he would not want to be maintained artificially in a permanently unconscious state. Physicians agreed there was no realistic chance of cognitive recovery. The court then squarely held that artificial nutrition and hydration are medical interventions, not basic custodial care, noting they require clinical judgment, surgical placement and maintenance of the tube, and ongoing medical oversight. Therefore, they are subject to the same right of refusal as other life-sustaining treatments such as ventilatory support. Addressing the hospital's contention that withdrawing feeding would constitute euthanasia or directly cause death by starvation, the court rejected the moral-legal distinction urged by the hospital. It reasoned that a competent patient (or an incompetent patient through substituted judgment) may refuse any medical intervention, even if death is a foreseeable consequence. The cause of death is the underlying medical condition, not the act of honoring the refusal of treatment. The court also analyzed the state interests traditionally weighed in such cases. Preservation of life, while weighty, is attenuated when the patient is permanently unconscious with no prospect of recovery. Prevention of suicide was inapplicable because an incompetent patient cannot form suicidal intent, and the decision here was to refuse treatment rather than affirmatively hasten death. There were no dependent third parties, and recognizing the right to refuse medical treatment enhances, rather than undermines, the ethical integrity of medicine, which centers on patient autonomy and informed consent. Finally, the court considered provider conscience. While it declined to force particular clinicians to participate against their moral beliefs, it held that institutional objection cannot nullify a patient's rights. The appropriate remedy is to authorize the guardian to arrange withdrawal by willing, qualified personnel or to transfer the patient to a facility that will comply, and to enjoin the objecting hospital from interference. This approach both vindicates the patient's rights and accommodates conscientious objection within limits.
Brophy is a foundational right-to-die case that cements three propositions central to health law: (1) incompetent patients' treatment rights are exercised via substituted judgment grounded in their known values; (2) artificial nutrition and hydration are medical treatments like any other, not categorically exempt from refusal; and (3) provider conscience does not trump a patient's lawful choice—institutions must at least permit transfer so the decision can be carried out. For law students, Brophy illustrates rigorous substituted-judgment analysis, the balancing of state interests in end-of-life decisions, and practical remedies that reconcile patient autonomy with clinician conscience.
Through the substituted judgment doctrine, the court examined credible evidence of Brophy's prior statements and values, including his expressed desire not to be kept alive by artificial means if permanently unconscious. The absence of a written directive was not dispositive; consistent oral statements, the permanence of his condition, and testimony from close family members persuaded the court that he would refuse artificial feeding under these circumstances.
The court emphasized that tube feeding requires surgical placement, ongoing medical monitoring, clinical skill, and carries medical risks and complications. Because it is a clinical intervention rather than mere provision of food and water by ordinary means, it falls within the law of informed consent and refusal applicable to other medical treatments.
No. The court drew a legal and ethical distinction between refusing medical treatment and affirmative acts to cause death. Honoring a refusal of treatment respects bodily integrity and autonomy. The cause of death is the underlying condition, not the withdrawal itself, and the prevention-of-suicide interest does not apply where the patient is incompetent and the act is a treatment refusal.
The court declined to compel specific clinicians to act against conscience. However, it ordered that the hospital may not obstruct the lawful decision and must allow transfer or access by willing, qualified providers to effectuate withdrawal. In short, conscience is accommodated, not controlling.
The court weighed preservation of life, prevention of suicide, protection of third parties, and maintaining the integrity of medicine. Given Brophy's permanent unconsciousness and lack of recovery prospects, these interests were comparatively weak and did not overcome his right—exercised through substituted judgment—to refuse treatment. The decision was seen as consistent with medical ethics centered on patient autonomy.
Brophy builds on Saikewicz and Spring by applying substituted judgment to life-sustaining artificial feeding, confirming it may be withdrawn. It predates Cruzan and foreshadowed the U.S. Supreme Court's recognition that states may require clear and convincing evidence of a patient's wishes. Together, these cases form a core canon governing refusal of life-sustaining treatment and end-of-life decision-making.
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hospital crystallizes Massachusetts' approach to end-of-life decision-making: a patient's right to refuse medical treatment survives incompetency and can be exercised through faithful reconstruction of the patient's own values and preferences. By treating artificial nutrition and hydration as medical treatment, the court aligned the law with clinical realities and ethical practice.
The decision also offered a pragmatic framework for reconciling patient autonomy with provider conscience. While it stopped short of compelling unwilling clinicians to participate, it ensured that moral objections cannot defeat a patient's lawful choice by requiring that institutions allow transfer or access to willing providers. For law students, Brophy remains essential reading for understanding substituted judgment, the limits of state interests, and the mechanics of judicial relief in right-to-die disputes.
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