Dying during covid-19

Article indépendant

MOORE, Bryanna

I had been on the phone with Madeleine's mother for fifteen minutes, and she had sobbed throughout. She pleaded with me, "You won't even let our family visit her together. If you really want to help my daughter, you will let us stay with her." Madeleine, who was twenty-four years old, was dying of end-stage acute myeloid leukemia and was intubated in one of our intensive care units. Her intensivist had requested a clinical ethics consultation for potentially inappropriate medical treatment-in my world of clinical ethics consultation, routine stuff. Except that, in March 2020, nothing was routine anymore. The Covid-19 pandemic calls for creative thinking about ad hoc and post hoc bereavement efforts, and it may result in efforts to revise existing accounts of what constitutes a good death in order to accommodate patients' and families' experiences at the end of life during a pandemic.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hast.1122

Voir la revue «The Hastings center report, 50»

Autres numéros de la revue «The Hastings center report»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Victoria's voluntary assisted dying act : nav...

Article | MOORE, Bryanna | The medical journal of Australia

Pas de résumé.

Victoria's voluntary assisted dying act : nav...

Article indépendant | MOORE, Bryanna | The medical journal of Australia

Pas de résumé.

Dying during covid-19

Article | MOORE, Bryanna | The Hastings center report | n°3 | vol.50

I had been on the phone with Madeleine's mother for fifteen minutes, and she had sobbed throughout. She pleaded with me, "You won't even let our family visit her together. If you really want to help my daughter, you will let us st...

De la même série

Epistemic humility in the age of assisted dyi...

Article indépendant | RILEY, Sean | The Hastings center report | n°2 | vol.55

The current debate on medical assistance-in-dying (MAID) fails to acknowledge the limitations of empirical data and the influence that cognitive biases exert in interpreting evidence and formulating arguments. This paper examines ...

When people facing dementia choose to hasten ...

Article indépendant | LARGENT, Emily A. | The Hastings center report | n°Suppl. 1 | vol.54

Some individuals facing dementia contemplate hastening their own death: weighing the possibility of living longer with dementia against the alternative of dying sooner but avoiding the later stages of cognitive and functional impa...

Opening the door : rethinking "difficult conv...

Article indépendant | BUCHBINDER, Mara | The Hastings center report | n°Suppl. 1 | vol.54

This essay looks closely at metaphors and other figures of speech that often feature in how Americans talk about dementia, becoming part of cultural narratives: shared stories that convey ideas and values, and also worries and fea...

Guiding the future : rethinking the role of a...

Article indépendant | GASTER, Barak | The Hastings center report | n°Suppl. 1 | vol.54

When people lose capacity to make a medical decision, the standard is to assess what their preferences would have been and try to honor their wishes. Dementia raises a special case in such situations, given its long, progressive t...

How seeking transfer often fails to help defi...

Article indépendant | WHITE, Douglas B. | The Hastings center report | n°2 | vol.54

On September 1, 2023, Texas made important revisions to it its decades-old statute granting legal safe harbor immunity to physicians who withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment over the objection of critically ill patients'...

Chargement des enrichissements...