Cascells: Testimony
(CAS1) The Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs visited U.S.
Naval Station Guantanamo Aug. 8 [2007] to ensure that detainees here are
receiving the highest level of care […] He mentioned that a recent article published in the Journal of
American Medical Association that challenged the ethics of enteral
feeding by Joint Medical Group personnel prompted him to visit
Guantanamo Bay and witness the procedure himself. “I
got to witness two of the tube feedings done by the nurse. In those
instances I witnessed, there was no fighting or resistance,” said
Casscells. “Tube feeding is a complicated issue
because the detainees are not American citizens, they are not prisoners
of war, nor are they criminals in the usual sense. They have this
controversial status, which makes the circumstances difficult.” In the future, Casscells said he would like to meet with Islamic physicians and religious leaders to discuss various medical ethics
issues. He also hopes to get input from these individuals on
controversial issues such as enteral feeding. “Medical ethics is
important, and not simple. We routinely seek a broad spectrum of
viewpoints. But I have not seen anything that suggests the feeding
policy is wrong. No U.S. law or religion approves of suicide. Since
some of the strikers are said to have told the doctors they are ordered
by detainee leaders to go on hunger strike, the doctors have to feed
them when there is a risk of death, since they feel they cannot take at
face value the refusal of food from someone who is coerced, or someone
who may be depressed.” (DoD Health Affairs Secretary visits Guantanamo).
(CAS2) This month [August 2007] Dr. S.
Ward Casscells, the new assistant secretary of Defense for health
affairs, went to Guantánamo to "look at it with my own eyes," he told
NEWSWEEK. Of the 355 detainees still in Gitmo, about 20 are on hunger
strike at any one time, he says. Prisoners who skip nine straight meals
go under "observation"; the forced feeding usually begins when they dip
15 percent beneath their ideal weight. […] Casscells watched as a
half-dozen Gitmo prisoners went through the 45-minute procedure. They
were strapped into "restraint chairs" and a 3/16-inch soft rubber tube
was fed through their noses. (Prisoners may request a local anesthetic
to ease the discomfort.) The patients ingest a tasteless high-protein
mix, and guards watch them for an hour to make sure they do not
self-induce vomiting. "Nobody kicked or screamed," Casscells says. The
prisoners "complained," he says—not about the feeding but about not
getting their day in court. He says some hunger strikers have told
guards they would be happy to stop, but fear being "reported back to
the detainee chain of command." There are seven doctors at Gitmo, and
according to Casscells, none has objected to the forced feedings. "The
doctors think they have a duty to keep the patients alive," says
Casscells. The forced feeding, like the hunger strikes, will go on (Gitmo: Should Doctors Force-Feed Prisoners?)