Confirming that former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) has been diagnosed with cerebral atrophy, Taipei Veterans General Hospital superintendent Lin Fang-yue (林芳郁) yesterday said it would be better to have caregivers look after Chen at home rather than in the hospital.
However, the Ministry of Justice still has to make an assessment and the final decision, Lin said.
Lin said Chen has been doing well after his hemorrhoid surgery on March 14.
“Chou Yuan-hua (周元華), the attending physician for Chen, has just returned to Taiwan today [Thursday]. We will wait for his medical team to complete and verify the report, which will be submitted to the Ministry of Justice on Friday,” Lin added.
Separately yesterday, a summary report by US-based neurologist Samuel Chou (周烒明) recommended that the best treatment for Chen is immediate home care.
The report follows a brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exam that Samuel Chou, a board member of the ALS & Neuromuscular Research Foundation in San Francisco with more than 40 years of experience in the field of neurology, conducted on Jan. 16 at the request of Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital’s vice superintendent Chen Shun-sheng (陳順勝), a member of Chen’s voluntary civilian medical team.
The Taipei Times obtained an advance copy of the report ahead of its official release today.
The former president, who is serving a 20-year sentence for corruption, has been staying at Taipei Veterans General Hospital for treatment after suffering from various complications, including sleep apnea, severe depression, minor brain damage and suspected Parkinson’s Disease.
Concern over Chen Shui-bian’s human rights was raised in the report, as the former president has been subjected to continuous light exposure and sleep deprivation in prison for years. Samuel Chou said he concurred with Amnesty International Australia’s observation, which described the treatment as “cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment for any person.”
The detrimental treatment is the cause of the neurological abnormalities which “must be considered direct consequences of the prison conditions,” Samuel Chou said in his report, adding that Chen Shui-bian’s current condition has deteriorated in comparison with September last year and could be “irreversible” if no active measures are taken.
The best treatment for Chen Shui-bian is “immediate home care, with supervising medical professionals and management by rehabilitation specialists in a home environment surrounded by family and loved ones,” the report said.
A home environment will be important “in halting further deterioration” and in beginning “the slow and long process towards alleviating the symptoms,” it concluded.
The report found that Chen Shui-bian has been suffering from speech impediment, emotional disturbance, cerebellar defect, poor memory, cognitive disorders or early signs of dementia, among other symptoms.
Joseph Lin, a former professor at the University of California at Davis who began following Chen Shui-bian’s medical condition last year and provided the report, said the summary would be sent to Washington for the reference of a group of US lawmakers who have been monitoring the treatment and health condition of the former president.
The US representatives include Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida and Steve Chabot of Ohio, who met Lin last December and expressed his wish to meet with Chen Shui-bian on his next trip to Taiwan, Lin said, adding that Chabot would like to collect more information and assessments on Chen Shui-bian’s case.
US Representative Robert Andrews of New Jersey has also written a letter to the US Department of State expressing his concern over the prison conditions and medical care for Chen Shui-bian, said Lin, who is visiting Taiwan in a private capacity.
Lin, a Taiwanese-American, led a medical team of US-based experts on a trip to Taiwan in June last year and concluded that the former president’s confinement in prison was “unacceptable” and had affected his physical and mental health. The team later submitted its findings to the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission.
Additional reporting by staff writer
UKRAINE, NVIDIA: The US leader said the subject of Russia’s war had come up ‘very strongly,’ while Jenson Huang was hoping that the conversation was good Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) and US President Donald Trump had differing takes following their meeting in Busan, South Korea, yesterday. Xi said that the two sides should complete follow-up work as soon as possible to deliver tangible results that would provide “peace of mind” to China, the US and the rest of the world, while Trump hailed the “great success” of the talks. The two discussed trade, including a deal to reduce tariffs slapped on China for its role in the fentanyl trade, as well as cooperation in ending the war in Ukraine, among other issues, but they did not mention
CALL FOR SUPPORT: President William Lai called on lawmakers across party lines to ensure the livelihood of Taiwanese and that national security is protected President William Lai (賴清德) yesterday called for bipartisan support for Taiwan’s investment in self-defense capabilities at the christening and launch of two coast guard vessels at CSBC Corp, Taiwan’s (台灣國際造船) shipyard in Kaohsiung. The Taipei (台北) is the fourth and final ship of the Chiayi-class offshore patrol vessels, and the Siraya (西拉雅) is the Coast Guard Administration’s (CGA) first-ever ocean patrol vessel, the government said. The Taipei is the fourth and final ship of the Chiayi-class offshore patrol vessels with a displacement of about 4,000 tonnes, Lai said. This ship class was ordered as a result of former president Tsai Ing-wen’s (蔡英文) 2018
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi yesterday lavished US President Donald Trump with praise and vows of a “golden age” of ties on his visit to Tokyo, before inking a deal with Washington aimed at securing critical minerals. Takaichi — Japan’s first female prime minister — pulled out all the stops for Trump in her opening test on the international stage and even announced that she would nominate him for a Nobel Peace Prize, the White House said. Trump has become increasingly focused on the Nobel since his return to power in January and claims to have ended several conflicts around the world,
GLOBAL PROJECT: Underseas cables ‘are the nervous system of democratic connectivity,’ which is under stress, Member of the European Parliament Rihards Kols said The government yesterday launched an initiative to promote global cooperation on improved security of undersea cables, following reported disruptions of such cables near Taiwan and around the world. The Management Initiative on International Undersea Cables aims to “bring together stakeholders, align standards, promote best practices and turn shared concerns into beneficial cooperation,” Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) said at a seminar in Taipei. The project would be known as “RISK,” an acronym for risk mitigation, information sharing, systemic reform and knowledge building, he said at the seminar, titled “Taiwan-Europe Subsea Cable Security Cooperation Forum.” Taiwan sits at a vital junction on