| Literature DB >> 18226273 |
Noriko Nagao1, Mark P Aulisio, Yoshio Nukaga, Misao Fujita, Shinji Kosugi, Stuart Youngner, Akira Akabayashi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Few comparative studies of clinical ethics consultation practices have been reported. The objective of this study was to explore how American and Japanese experts analyze an Alzheimer's case regarding ethics consultation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18226273 PMCID: PMC2268696 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-9-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Participant's Demographic Information
| Attributes | Physician A | Ethicist B | Physician C | Ethicist D |
| Nationality | United States | United States | Japan | Japan |
| Specialization | medicine/psychiatry | ethics | medicine/internal medicine | ethics |
| Professional degree | M.D. | PhD in philosophy | M.D. | MA in philosophy |
| Affiliation | university | university/hospital | general hospital | university |
| Number of available hospital beds | university hospital 500–600 beds | polyclinic hospital 700 beds | general hospital 110 beds | university hospital, mid-size general hospital 200–300 beds |
| Years of experience | about 20 | about 11 | about 1 | about 4 |
| Total number of cases experienced | more than 500 | about 250 | about five | about 400 |
Explanation by the Physician
| Name and age | Mrs. Mineko Sakata. Age = 92 SEX: Female |
| Diagnosis | Late-onset Alzheimer's disease. |
| Chief complaints | disturbance of consciousness, cognitive impairment, and dysphagia |
| [History and Episode] | |
| A member of our staff has indicated the possible legal and ethical problems of using only a peripheral intravenous drip (IV), since doing so would lead to a prognosis of death within a few weeks. We therefore did not propose the use of only an IV to her family as a possible therapy. We have also ruled out central venous nutrition (total parenteral nutrition using a central venous catheter), and we did not recommend it in terms of the patient's age, condition and the necessary invasive interventions. As a result, we recommended a gastrostomy (Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy: PEG) for total enteral nutrition. In the future, we plan to transfer the patient to Y hospital for elderly. | |
| Mrs. Fujiko Sakata, the patient's daughter-in-law, has expressed that she would not want any other medical treatments if the patient were unable to eat. The patient also has a grandson whose name is Joji, Mrs. Fujiko Sakata's son, and who occasionally comes to visit the patient. His opinion is that a gastrostomy would be allowed if it can prevent his grandmother from dying of starvation. Joji is currently in the US since he has worked there for a long period of time. | |
Figure 1Family tree of the case. White square means Male. White circle means Female. Black squares and circles mean Dead. Dot circle signifies 'Living together.'