Medical Ethicist Reverend David O' Leary
By Bruce Morgan
The Rev. David O'Leary has been the university
chaplain at Tufts University and a senior lecturer in
medical ethics on the health sciences campus since
2002. Although he holds a glittering raft of academic
credentials from St. John's Seminary, Boston College
and Oxford University, he began humbly enough in
the working-class town of Lynn, Mass., where his dad
punched the clock at the United Shoe factory and his
mom worked for the phone company. "We weren't
active Catholics," says O'Leary quietly, "but church
was part of the life."
His doctoral dissertation at Oxford was titled
The Roman Catholic Perspective on the Morality
of Withdrawing or Withholding Food and Fluid
Administered to an Individual in the Persistent
Vegetative State. He survived his oral defense despite
the presence of a pesky Dominican priest on the faculty
panel who quizzed him repeatedly about the metaphysics
of the soul of a dying person. Each time the priest
bore in, O'Leary responded that this topic lay beyond
the scope of his thesis. "I didn't know anything about it,
other than the definition of metaphysics as looking for
a black cat in a dark room that isn't there," he laughs.
O'Leary wears many hats. In addition to his regular
teaching responsibilities at several Tufts schools and his
day-to-day work in the trenches of campus ministry, he
also serves as a member of the Institutional Review Board
(IRB) at Tufts Medical Center. We spoke in O'Leary's
sunlit office on the ground floor of Goddard Chapel on
the Medford/Somerville Campus.
Q: When you first expressed an interest in entering the
church, what was your parents' reaction?
Oh, they weren't that pleased. They would have preferred
grandchildren and didn't understand how a son could
become a priest. The idea grew on them after a while.
Q: Why did you pursue your doctorate in medical
ethics, as opposed to some other focus?
I was drawn towards moral theology, and then I got my
licentiate degree in Catholic social ethics. I fi gured I had
a great foundation in moral Catholic social teaching,
and then the fi eld was getting more and more involved
in medical issues, so I said, well, let's jump on that.
Q: Tell me about the class you teach at the medical
school.
When I'm there I just try to raise the question: Who is
the doctor or the researcher working for? It's not one
answer - it's profession, practice, patient. You have
to figure out where your lines are. And then I always
try to pass on what I learned from a great doctor at
Georgetown, Dr. Edmund Pellegrino. He always used
to say to his interns that the first question to ask is
"How may I help you?" and not "What is wrong?" Why
put the person in the negative to begin with? You are
there to help. Let the patient start the conversation. In
that way you're restoring dignity.
Q: What sorts of issues come up in your Institutional
Review Board role?
All research on human subjects has to be approved by
an ethics committee, according to federal guidelines.
Everyone on the committee has their one category
where they like to be a specialist, and for me it's to make
sure the subject has the freedom to say yes or no to participation.
If someone's coming at you with a clipboard,
and it's your doctor - well, where's the line of freedom?
Can the person say no?
Q: Freedom seems to run through a lot of what you
care about, whether it's freedom at end of life or
freedom to determine one's own course.
Yes. Now I'm betraying my own training. I trained
under a great priest, Josef Fuchs, a German theologian.
His thing was freedom. He said the human person is so
constitutive of a being that's created with freedom that
even after the point of physical death, God would give
us the freedom to choose.
I've used that many times in celebrating the sad
occasion of someone's funeral due to suicide to say, OK,
he or she might have made a wrong decision based on
a clinical depression or a chemical imbalance in the
brain, but the next time they were given a choice I'm
sure they chose God. TM