The DNR decision--Part II. Ethical principles and application.

J A Headley
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Abstract

The medical literature presents conflicting messages and nonspecific guidelines regarding the DNR decision. Ethical principles address the questions: who should decide and for whom? Most sources acknowledge the competent patient's right to refuse treatment, but there is less agreement about resuscitating patients unlikely to recover from the underlying illness. The principles of nonmaleficence and paternalism come into play when the physician's professional duties to prevent suffering and to provide "death with dignity" begins to conflict with the patient's autonomy. Competent adults have the right to participate in decisions regarding their care. Whether this right includes the right to demand as well as refuse certain treatments is not clear. For physicians who institute DNR status without the patient's or family's consent, paternalism and professionalism have overridden patient autonomy. In that case, nonmaleficence is the basis of the physician's view of CPR as a harmful burden.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

DNR决定——第二部分。伦理原则和应用。
医学文献提出了相互矛盾的信息和关于DNR决定的非特异性指南。伦理原则解决的问题是:谁应该做决定,为谁做决定?大多数消息来源承认有能力的病人有拒绝治疗的权利,但对不太可能从潜在疾病中康复的病人进行复苏的看法却不太一致。当医生防止痛苦和提供“有尊严的死亡”的职业职责开始与病人的自主权发生冲突时,非恶意原则和家长式作风就开始发挥作用了。有能力的成年人有权参与有关其护理的决定。这项权利是否包括要求和拒绝某些治疗的权利尚不清楚。对于那些在未经患者或家属同意的情况下确立“不抢救”地位的医生来说,家长作风和专业精神已经压倒了患者的自主权。在这种情况下,非恶意是医生认为心肺复苏术是有害负担的基础。(摘要删节250字)
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