Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Decisions to withdraw or withhold potentially life-sustaining treatment are common in intensive care and precede the majority of deaths. When families resist or oppose doctors' suggestions that it is time to stop treatment, it is often unclear what should be done. This revie...

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Hlavní autoři: Wilkinson, D, Savulescu, J
Médium: Journal article
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, Inc. 2011
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author Wilkinson, D
Savulescu, J
author_facet Wilkinson, D
Savulescu, J
author_sort Wilkinson, D
collection OXFORD
description PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Decisions to withdraw or withhold potentially life-sustaining treatment are common in intensive care and precede the majority of deaths. When families resist or oppose doctors' suggestions that it is time to stop treatment, it is often unclear what should be done. This review will summarize recent literature around futility judgements in intensive care emphasising ethical and practical questions. RECENT FINDINGS: There has been a shift in the language of futility. Patients' families often do not believe medical assessments that further treatment would be unsuccessful. Attempts to determine through data collection which patients have a low or zero chance of survival have been largely unsuccessful, and are hampered by varying definitions of futility. A due-process model for adjudicating futility disputes has been developed, and may provide a better solution to futility disputes than previous futility statutes. SUMMARY: Specific criteria for unilateral withdrawal of treatment have proved hard to define or defend. However, it is ethical for doctors to decline to provide treatment that is medically inappropriate or futile. Understanding the justification for a futility judgement may be relevant to deciding the most appropriate way to resolve futility disputes.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5ac8e366-c724-443a-b7b4-45344732ece32022-03-26T17:17:55ZKnowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5ac8e366-c724-443a-b7b4-45344732ece3EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordLippincott Williams and Wilkins, Inc.2011Wilkinson, DSavulescu, J PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Decisions to withdraw or withhold potentially life-sustaining treatment are common in intensive care and precede the majority of deaths. When families resist or oppose doctors' suggestions that it is time to stop treatment, it is often unclear what should be done. This review will summarize recent literature around futility judgements in intensive care emphasising ethical and practical questions. RECENT FINDINGS: There has been a shift in the language of futility. Patients' families often do not believe medical assessments that further treatment would be unsuccessful. Attempts to determine through data collection which patients have a low or zero chance of survival have been largely unsuccessful, and are hampered by varying definitions of futility. A due-process model for adjudicating futility disputes has been developed, and may provide a better solution to futility disputes than previous futility statutes. SUMMARY: Specific criteria for unilateral withdrawal of treatment have proved hard to define or defend. However, it is ethical for doctors to decline to provide treatment that is medically inappropriate or futile. Understanding the justification for a futility judgement may be relevant to deciding the most appropriate way to resolve futility disputes.
spellingShingle Wilkinson, D
Savulescu, J
Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.
title Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.
title_full Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.
title_fullStr Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.
title_full_unstemmed Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.
title_short Knowing when to stop: futility in the ICU.
title_sort knowing when to stop futility in the icu
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