The Slow Code

To the Editor: We would like to take issue with the call for the demise of the slow code (Feb. 12 issue). 1 Decisions concerning the intensity, duration, and appropriateness of the procedures performed during a code are made all the time. When the family requests that “everything be done” for a dyin...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 1998-06, Vol.338 (26), p.1921-1923
1. Verfasser: Rich, H
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container_end_page 1923
container_issue 26
container_start_page 1921
container_title The New England journal of medicine
container_volume 338
creator Rich, H
description To the Editor: We would like to take issue with the call for the demise of the slow code (Feb. 12 issue). 1 Decisions concerning the intensity, duration, and appropriateness of the procedures performed during a code are made all the time. When the family requests that “everything be done” for a dying patient, it is the physician's duty to provide the family with the feeling and knowledge that indeed everything appropriate was done. The slow code should not be seen as an attempt to cheat the patient, or more frequently his or her family, but rather as a way of . . .
doi_str_mv 10.1056/NEJM199806253382613
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; ProQuest Central UK/Ireland; New England Journal of Medicine
subjects Attitude to Death
Bioethics
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Humans
Time Factors
title The Slow Code
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