domingo, 10 de diciembre de 2017

BioEdge: If you get a ‘do not resuscitate’ tattoo, will doctors pay attention?

BioEdge: If you get a ‘do not resuscitate’ tattoo, will doctors pay attention?

Bioedge

If you get a ‘do not resuscitate’ tattoo, will doctors pay attention?
     
Doctors at a Florida hospital’s emergency department were startled to discover the words “do not resuscitate”, together with a signature, tattooed to an unconscious man’s chest. Should they respect the request or not?

The 70-year-old man had no identification and no next-of-kin could be found. His blood alcohol was high. His health was very bad, with a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, and an irregular heart rate.

The doctors decided to keep him alive, invoking the principle of not choosing an irreversible path when faced with uncertainty. In a case report in the New England Journal of Medicine, they say that “He was placed on empirical antibiotics, received intravenous fluid resuscitation and vasopressors, and was treated with bilevel positive airway pressure.”

However, the hospital’s ethics consultants advised the medical team to honour the patient’s request. They contended that “it was most reasonable to infer that the tattoo expressed an authentic preference, that what might be seen as caution could also be seen as standing on ceremony, and that the law is sometimes not nimble enough to support patient-centered care and respect for patients’ best interests.”

The patient died without recovering consciousness.

The issue of DNR tattoos has not received an extraordinary amount of attention in the scholarly literature. There are counter-examples. For instance, in 2012, California doctors reported in the Journal of General Internal Medicine that a 59-year-old man was admitted to hospital for a below-the-knee amputation due to chronic ulcers. He wanted to be resuscitated in the event of heart or lung failure.

Noting that he had a DNR tattoo, hospital staff queried the conflicting signals. “He explained that he had lost a bet playing poker with fellow ancillary hospital staffers while inebriated in his younger years; the loser had to tattoo ‘D.N.R.’ across his chest.” Understandably, the doctors suggested that he have the tattoo removed to avoid confusion in the future. “He stated he did not think anyone would take his tattoo seriously and declined tattoo removal.”

So the question of whether you should get a DNR tattoo remains open. Perhaps you could write, “Do not resuscitate (and I got this tattoo when I was sober)”.


Bioedge

Unlike issues such as euthanasia or stem cell research, the bioethics of tattoos is not highly developed. However, it presents its own challenges and complexities. What if a patient shows up in emergency with "do not resuscitate" tatooed across his chest? Is that a valid advance end-of-life directive? There are so many issues here. How do the doctors know if he (let's assume it's a "he") still wants a DNR? Did he get it when he was drunk? Was it voluntary? There are so many fascinating issues -- read our preliminary report below.

On a completely different note, with Christmas drawing near, I’m making an incredibly self-interested suggestion. Why not put a copy of my recent book, The Great Human Dignity Heist: how bioethicists are trashing the foundations of Western Civilization, in someone’s stocking? It’s available through the Australian publisher, at Amazon and at Book Depository. I can’t think of a better gift!



Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
 Comment on BioedgeFind Us on FacebookFollow us on Twitter
NEWS THIS WEEK

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
We're surviving on the smell of an oily rag

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
Not necessarily, but ask an ethics committee

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
Bangladesh is trying to sell the refugees on the virtues of contraception

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
Opposed by the Quebec College of Physicians

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
If they want to maximise their compensation, perhaps the answer is Yes.

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
The appalling story of an Australian woman who binged on laxatives

by Michael Cook | Dec 02, 2017
Triggered by the escape of a defector from the North
IN DEPTH THIS WEEK

by Sharmila Rudrappa | Dec 02, 2017
What impact are bans on commercial surrogacy having on women?
BioEdge
Phone: +61 2 8005 8605
Mobile: 0422-691-615

No hay comentarios: