Dying in the intensive care unit

Modern intensive care is responsible both for curative interventions in critical health situations and palliative terminal care for the dying ICU patient. By applying an integrated ethics approach, this article examines organizational and cultural factors shaping good terminal care in the ICU. Start...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medizinische Klinik, Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin, 2014-02, Vol.109 (1), p.13
1. Verfasser: Wallner, J
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creator Wallner, J
description Modern intensive care is responsible both for curative interventions in critical health situations and palliative terminal care for the dying ICU patient. By applying an integrated ethics approach, this article examines organizational and cultural factors shaping good terminal care in the ICU. Starting with a reflection on what it means to be human, ethical goals for care of the dying are formulated. Among them, the article focuses on practices ensuring a dignified dying process, on the structured engagement of patients' families, on respecting cultural and spiritual values, and on a clinical pathway for terminal care as an institutional framework. In conclusion, it becomes evident that good terminal care in the ICU not only depends on ethically sound decisions on withholding or withdrawing medical interventions but also on organizational and cultural aspects which must be acknowledged and shaped.
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source MEDLINE; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Critical Pathways - ethics
Cultural Competency
Ethics, Medical
Germany
Humans
Intensive Care Units - ethics
Palliative Care - ethics
Patient Care Planning
Professional-Family Relations
Right to Die - ethics
Spirituality
Terminal Care - ethics
title Dying in the intensive care unit
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