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This practice would deny patients potentially
beneficial therapies. Instead, a time-limited trial of therapy could be used to
clarify the patient's prognosis. At the end of the trial, a conference to review
and revise the treatment plan should be held. Some health care workers or family
members may be reluctant to withdraw treatments even when they believe that the
patient would not have wanted them continued. The physician should prevent or
resolve these situations by addressing with patient's family feelings of guilt, fears
and concerns before the life support system is withdrawn.
Do-Not-Resuscitate
Orders
Intervention
in the case of a cardiopulmonary arrest is inappropriate for some patients,
particularly those with terminal irreversible illness whose death is expected
and imminent. Because the onset of cardiopulmonary arrest does not permit
deliberative decision making, decisions about resuscitation must be made in
advance.
Physicians should especially encourage patients who face serious
illness or who are in advanced old age or their surrogates, to discuss
resuscitation. Although a do-not-resuscitate order applies only to
cardiopulmonary arrest, discussions about this issue often reflect a
revision of the larger goals and means of the care plan. The entire health care
team must be carefully apprised of the nature of these changes.
Do-not-resuscitate orders or requests for no cardiopulmonary resuscitation
should specify care strategies and must be written in the medical record along
with notes and orders that describe all other changes in the treatment goals or
plans.
It is essential that patients or surrogates understand that a
do-not-resuscitate order does not mean that the patient will be ineligible for
other life-prolonging measures, both therapeutic and palliative. However, the
appropriateness of a do-not-resuscitate order during and immediately after any
procedure needs to be individually negotiated. It is unethical for physicians or
nurses to perform half-hearted resuscitation efforts ("slow codes").
Sometimes a patient or surrogate insists on a resuscitation effort, even when
they are informed that it will almost certainly fail. A family's religious or
other beliefs or need for closure under such circumstances deserve careful
attention. Although the physician need not provide an effort at resuscitation
that cannot conceivably restore circulation and breathing, the physician should
help the family to understand and accept this position. It is more controversial
whether physicians may unilaterally write a do-not-resuscitate order when the
patient may survive for a very brief time in the hospital.
Empathy and
thoughtful exploration of options for care with patients or surrogate decision
makers should make such impasses rare. Full discussion about the issue should
include the indications for and outcomes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, the
physical impact on the patient, implications for caregivers, the do-not-resuscitate order, the legal aspects of such orders and the physician's
role as patient advocate.
Physicians who write a unilateral do-not-resuscitate
order must inform the patient or surrogate.
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