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Published in: Critical Care 5/2003

01-10-2003 | Commentary

Ethics roundtable debate: should a sedated dying patient be wakened to say goodbye to family?

Authors: Anna Batchelor, Leslie Jenal, Farhad Kapadia, Stephen Streat, Leslie Whetstine, Brian Woodcock

Published in: Critical Care | Issue 5/2003

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Abstract

Intensivists have the potential to maintain vital signs almost indefinitely, but not necessarily the potential to make moribund patients whole. Current ethical and legal mandates push patient autonomy to the forefront of care plans. When patients are incapable of expressing their preferences, surrogates are given proxy. It is unclear how these preferences extend to the very brink of inevitable death. Some say that patients should have the opportunity and authority to direct their death spiral. Others say it would be impossible for them to do so because an inevitable death spiral cannot be effectively palliated. Humane principles dictate they be spared the unrelenting discomfort surrounding death. The present case examines such a patient and the issues surrounding a unique end-of-life decision.
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Metadata
Title
Ethics roundtable debate: should a sedated dying patient be wakened to say goodbye to family?
Authors
Anna Batchelor
Leslie Jenal
Farhad Kapadia
Stephen Streat
Leslie Whetstine
Brian Woodcock
Publication date
01-10-2003
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Critical Care / Issue 5/2003
Electronic ISSN: 1364-8535
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/cc2329

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