The Physician's Responsibility toward Hopelessly Ill Patients

To the Editor: Wanzer and colleagues' thorough review of the physician's responsibility toward dying patients (March 30 issue) 1 could have been even more helpful in two ways. First, it could have explicitly acknowledged that it is not chiefly the technical aspects of caring for the dying...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 1989-10, Vol.321 (14), p.975-978
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description To the Editor: Wanzer and colleagues' thorough review of the physician's responsibility toward dying patients (March 30 issue) 1 could have been even more helpful in two ways. First, it could have explicitly acknowledged that it is not chiefly the technical aspects of caring for the dying patient that "tax the ingenuity and equanimity of the most skilled health professionals." Rather, it is the existential aspects, because they impinge on the physician as a person, not just as a professional in a social role. The white-coated professional technician is challenged to formulate prognoses with sometimes ambiguous data, to adjust constantly the . . . No extract is available for articles shorter than 400 words.
doi_str_mv 10.1056/NEJM198910053211415
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subjects Ethics, Medical
Euthanasia
Right to Die
Terminal Care
title The Physician's Responsibility toward Hopelessly Ill Patients
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