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Whose death is it, anyway?

Authors :
Gilligan T
Raffin TA
Source :
Annals of internal medicine [Ann Intern Med] 1996 Jul 15; Vol. 125 (2), pp. 137-41.
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

As medicine has increasingly gained the power to prolong life in the face of devastating illness, patients have increasingly become concerned about maintaining some control over how and when death arrives. Competent patients have the legal right to refuse treatment, but critically ill patients are frequently unable to participate in decision making. Advance directives were designed to help patients establish the level of care they would receive if they were to be rendered incompetent; yet, as the case discussed in this essay shows, even a valid advance directive does not guarantee that unwanted medical interventions will not be forced on us. The problem of physicians ignoring their patients' wishes goes beyond issues of communication and reflects an ongoing ambivalence about power and control in the physician-patient relationship. Unfortunately, many physicians find it easier to define success in terms of life and death than to try to determine what sort of existence is meaningful to an individual patient.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0003-4819
Volume :
125
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of internal medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8678368
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-125-2-199607150-00010