Neurology Specific Literature Search   
 
[home][thesaurus]
    
Click Here to return To Results

 

Withdrawal of Life-Support from Patients in a Persistent Vegetative State
Lancet 337:96-98, Boyd,K.M., 1991
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
We recently argued that doctors may sometimes be ethically justified in assisting the death of a patient with continued pain or distress caused by an incurable illness and who has expressed a clear and consistent wish for this outcome.We believe that such a policy would be unlikely to lead to the unrequested ending of the lives of patients who are unconscious or severely demented.But could there be grounds for withdrawal of life- supporting medical treatment in such patients whose condition has been diagnosed with certainty as permanent,if they have previously expressed a similar wish?Such grounds may exist in the case of patients left in a persistent vegetative state after surviving an acute brain insult because of modern resuscitation and life-sustaining treatment.
 
Related Tags
(click to filter results - removes previous filter)

ethics in neurology
grimacing
head injury
hypoxia
hypoxic encephalopathy
life support,withdrawal of
persistent vegetative state
release phenomena

Click Here to return To Results