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Dax Cowart

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Dax Cowart
Born
Donald Cowart

1947
Texas
Died
2019
OccupationAttorney
Known forAdvocating for patient autonomy
Notable workPlease Let Me Die and Dax's Case video documentaries

Dax Cowart (1947–2019) is a former United States Air Force pilot who served in the Vietnam War. In 1973, Cowart sustained debilitating injuries from a propane gas explosion that resulted in the loss of his hands and eyes. He suffered significant hearing loss, and was so severely burned over most of his body that the only place where his skin remained undamaged was on the bottom of his feet. Prior to the accident, he was known to his family and friends as Don or Donnie; however, after the accident he changed his first name to Dax because it was a rather uncommon name, easier for him to write, and it helped to avoid the embarrassment he felt after responding to someone he thought was addressing him, only to discover they were addressing someone else with the same name.

Cowart's pleas that he be allowed to die were not honored even though, that same year, the American Medical Association had endorsed a competent patient's right to discontinue prolonged life-saving treatments. He said the doctors thought that if they forced him to receive treatment, he would change his mind and want to live, and that it would be the best outcome for him in the long run. Dax disagreed and continues to hold the belief that it is wrong to force a person who is in full control of their faculties to receive treatment against their will; a violation of one's civil rights.[1]

Despite the debilitating effects of his injuries, Cowart graduated from Texas Tech University in 1986 with a law degree, and established his own legal practice as a personal injury attorney.[2] He became notable for the ethical issues he raised over the medical community's efforts to save his life against his wishes. His case is often cited in discussions of medical ethics.[3]

Accident

On July 25, 1973 Cowart was a 25-year-old US Air Force Reserve pilot working with his father, a cattle rancher and real estate broker in Henderson, TX. The accident occurred as they returned to their car after inspecting a tract of land they were considering for purchase. A nearby underground pipeline was leaking propane gas – which unlike natural gas is heavier than air and thus collects in low areas such as the creek bed near which they had parked – and as they started the car the propane exploded.

The surrounding trees and vegetation caught fire as Cowart was showered by glass from the windshield. He made his way out of the car and ran, breaking through three walls of fire, rolling on the ground after each one to extinguish his burning clothes. After a mile and a half he collapsed.[4][5] He later wrote:

I was burned so severely and in so much pain that I did not want to live even in the early moments following the explosion. A man who heard my shouts for help came running down the road, I asked him for a gun. He said, "Why?" I said, "Can't you see I am a dead man? I am going to die anyway. I need to put myself out of this misery." In a very kind and compassionate caring way, he said, "I can't do that."[6]

Cowart's father, who had been outside the car at the time of the explosion, was found barely alive near the edge of the fire.[4] Both men were taken to a hospital in Kilgore, and from there another 140 miles (230 km), in the same ambulance, to Parkland Hospital in Dallas; Cowart's father died en route.

Fearing he would be unable to regain his former level of activity, he refused treatment en route to the hospital. In the hospital, he has written, he was "forcibly treated for 14 months" despite asking to be allowed to die. He likened some of the treatments – such as bandage replacement and chlorinated baths – to feeling he was being "skinned alive". He was given limited painkillers because of a poor understanding of their risks, and was denied access to legal assistance by which he might have forced treatment to end.[6]

Cowart's injuries required amputation of both his hands, leaving only a fragment of thumb by which he could grasp small items such as eating utensils and a cup handle. Both eyes were removed and damage to his ears left his hearing impaired. What little undamaged skin remained on his body was used for grafts to reshape his nostrils, lips, and eyelids.[4][5] He attempted suicide several times.[when?]

Later life

Cowart earned a law degree in 1986 from Texas Tech University. He opened his own law practice, and later worked with trial attorney Robert Hilliard, founder of Hilliard Munoz Gonzales LLC., Corpus Christi, Texas.[7]

After the accident, Cowart changed his first name to Dax to avoid confusion after he embarrassingly discovered that, on more than one occasion, he had mistakingly responded to the name Donald when another person was being addressed. The shorter name was also easier for him to write.[6] He married Samantha Berryessa, a California attorney, and they lived on a farm in San Diego County.[8]

Cowart was a frequent teacher and speaker at the Trial Lawyers College in Dubois, Wyoming. The college was founded by Gerry Spence, and the courses provided are Continuing Legal Education (CLE) accredited by "the state in which the course is held."[9]

Cowart spoke on patient rights in the US and abroad. His life and his reflections on what has happened to him challenged medicine's understanding of itself as a moral practice.[10] A documentary of his plight titled Please Let Me Die was filmed in 1974,[11] with a follow-up documentary titled Dax's Case filmed in 1984.[12] Cowart's case illustrates several issues of patient autonomy.[13]

Death

After a long battle with cancer, Dax died April 28, 2019 with his wife Samantha Berryessa Cowart by his side at their ranch in San Diego, California.[14]

References

  1. ^ "A Happy Life Afterward Doesn't Make Up for Torture". Washington Post. 1983-06-26. Retrieved 2019-02-18.
  2. ^ "Find A Lawyer - Dax S. Cowart". State Bar of Texas. Retrieved 2019-02-18.
  3. ^ Jonsen, Albert; Siegler, Mark; Winslade, William. "Clinical Ethics: A Practical Approach to Ethical Decisions in Clinical Medicine, Fourth Edition". McGraw Hill Professional.
  4. ^ a b c Steinbach, Alice (1998-04-26). "'Please let me die'". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2019-02-16.
  5. ^ a b "Burn Victim Survived Hell, Still Insists On Right To Die". tribunedigital-orlandosentinel. 1989-05-29. Retrieved 2019-02-16.
  6. ^ a b c University of Virginia, October 2, 2002. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
  7. ^ Carlyle, Erin (October 2011). "The Bulldog" (PDF). Texas Super Lawyers Magazine. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  8. ^ "Samantha Berryessa". Village News. October 25, 2018. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  9. ^ "FAQ". Trial Lawyers College. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  10. ^ ResearchChannel - Dax's Story: A Severely Burned Man's Thirty-Year Odyssey
  11. ^ Please Let Me Die
  12. ^ Dax's Case
  13. ^ James F. Childress, Practical reasoning in bioethics, Indiana University Press, p122.
  14. ^ "Attorney Cowart". Attorney Samantha Berryessa. 2019-04-25. Retrieved 2019-05-08.

Further reading