Title
Conditional Permission to Not Resuscitate: A Middle Ground for Resuscitation.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-27-2019
Publication Title
Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
Keywords
CPR; DNAR; DNAR-X; MOELI; POLST; Resuscitation; medical ethics
Abstract
Every decision to perform or withhold cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has ethical implications that are not always well understood. Value-based decisions with far-reaching consequences are made rapidly, based on incomplete or possibly inaccurate information. For some patients, skilled, timely CPR can restore spontaneous circulation, but for others, success may either be unobtainable or bring serious iatrogenic consequences. Because CPR is an aggressive process yielding mixed results, patients must be informed about the likelihood of its positive and adverse outcomes. In considering whether to accept or refuse it, patients should also be given a realistic set of alternatives. Current protocols limit patients' options by restricting them to a choice between accepting or refusing CPR. Adding a "middle" code, DNAR-X (Do Not Attempt Resuscitation-Except), significantly expands patients' right to control what happens to their bodies by allowing them to stipulate CPR in some circumstances but not in others.
Clinical Institute
Cardiovascular (Heart)
Department
Biomedical Ethics
Department
Cardiology
Recommended Citation
Stuart, Richard B and Thielke, Stephen, "Conditional Permission to Not Resuscitate: A Middle Ground for Resuscitation." (2019). Articles, Abstracts, and Reports. 1295.
https://digitalcommons.providence.org/publications/1295