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Physician end-of-life Decision-Making in Newborns in a Less Developed Health Care Setting: …

Tipo de Mídia:

Verhagen AA, Spijkerman J, Muskiet FD, Sauer PJ. Physician end-of-life decision-making in newborns in a less developed health care setting: insight in considerations and implementation. Acta Paediatr. 2007 Oct;96(10):1437-40. Epub 2007 Aug 20. PubMed PMID: 17714536.

Background
A substantial proportion of the decisions to withhold or withdraw life-prolonging treatment are based on the newborn’s predicted poor quality of life. All previous studies on end-of-life decisions were done in countries with adequate support for disabled neonatal intensive care units (NICU) survivors. Data on quality-of-life considerations in countries with developing health care are not available yet.

Aim
The aim of the study was to examine the considerations of physicians taking end-of-life decisions in sick newborns and how those decisions are carried out in practice in a less developed health care setting.

Method
Thirty-two deaths over 18 months in a neonatal unit were retrospectively analyzed.

Results
Twenty-four deaths (75%) were attributable to withholding or withdrawing of treatment. In 7 of these cases (29%), the decisions were based on quality-of-life considerations, mostly predicted suffering and expected hospital dependency. For the majority of paediatricians, end-of-life decision making was not influenced by legal or economic considerations or by considerations regarding availability of supportive care after discharge.

Conclusion
Our study suggests that physician end-of-life decision making in this unit in a less developed health care setting is found to be similar to that in developed health care settings and is independent of availability of supportive care after discharge for infants with disabilities.

Disponível Em:<https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/>