| Literature DB >> 19860873 |
Hilde Buiting1, Johannes van Delden, Bregje Onwuteaka-Philpsen, Judith Rietjens, Mette Rurup, Donald van Tol, Joseph Gevers, Paul van der Maas, Agnes van der Heide.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An important principle underlying the Dutch Euthanasia Act is physicians' responsibility to alleviate patients' suffering. The Dutch Act states that euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide are not punishable if the attending physician acts in accordance with criteria of due care. These criteria concern the patient's request, the patient's suffering (unbearable and hopeless), the information provided to the patient, the presence of reasonable alternatives, consultation of another physician and the applied method of ending life. To demonstrate their compliance, the Act requires physicians to report euthanasia to a review committee. We studied which arguments Dutch physicians use to substantiate their adherence to the criteria and which aspects attract review committees' attention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19860873 PMCID: PMC2781018 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-10-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Characteristics of the patient's request.(Questions phrased from the standard form of the reporting physician)
| n = 158 | |
|---|---|
| No | 11 |
| Yes | 99 |
| | |
| Patient was clear headed | 65 |
| Patient's request was repeated several times | 23 |
| Patient had no mental problems | 13 |
| Patient was aware about his situation and prospects | 10 |
| Physician knew the patient very well | 4 |
| Other3 | 15 |
| Not clearly specified in physicians' report | 5 |
| No | 100 |
| Yes | 97 |
1 case.
2. More than one answer could be given, open question.
3. Other includes: Family was convinced that the request was well-considered, patient's request had been judged by another physician, availability of an advance directive, patient always wanted to decide for himself.
Arguments for patient's suffering being unbearable or hopeless. (Questions phrased from the standard form of the reporting physician)
| Pain | 32 |
| Dyspnoea | 22 |
| Fatigue | 15 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 15 |
| Incontinence/diarrhoea/constipation | 6 |
| Cachexia | 6 |
| Confusion | 3 |
| Fear | 3 |
| Other3 | 9 |
| Bedridden | 19 |
| Appetite/thirst/eating- and swallowing capacity | 10 |
| Language | 4 |
| Other4 | 4 |
| Dependency | 28 |
| Deterioration/general malaise | 15 |
| Hopelessness, no treatment possible | 13 |
| Loss of autonomy/identity | 4 |
| Loss of dignity | 2 |
| Mentally exhausted | 7 |
| Other5 | 16 |
| No treatments possible | 32 |
| No curative treatments possible | 28 |
| No treatments to relieve symptoms possible | 3 |
| No curative treatments + treatments to relieve symptoms possible | 11 |
| Short life expectancy | 8 |
| Other6 | 9 |
| Not clearly specified in the report | 8 |
1. In 8 cases (4%) the nature of patient's suffering was explained, but no explicit arguments for the suffering being unbearable were given.
2. More than one aspect could be mentioned.
3. Other include: decubitus, edema, epileptic insults, itch, and cough.
4. Other include: cognitive function, sleeping problems and general physical functioning.
5. Other include: loneliness, to be a burden to relatives, losing interest, mental suffering, no quality of life.
6. Other include: no differentiation between unbearable and hopeless suffering, worsening expected.
Characteristics of the presence of reasonable alternatives. (questions phrased from the standard form of the reporting physician)
| n = 158 | |
|---|---|
| Medication | 89 |
| Radio- or chemotherapy | 21 |
| Other2 | 46 |
| Not clearly specified in the report | 1 |
| Yes: | 353 |
| Administration of sedatives | 10 |
| Other pain medication | 11 |
| Radio- or chemotherapy | 3 |
| Intensive home care/family care | 2 |
| Other | 10 |
| n = 56 | |
| Positive | 4 |
| Negative | 81 |
| Other | 13 |
| Not clearly specified in the report | 2 |
1. One or more answers could be given.
2. Other include: oxygen administration, artificial respiration, artificial administration of food and fluids, blood transfusions, home care, surgery, stoma, administration of sedatives, talks with the patient.
3. In three cases, the question was answered affirmatively but not further explained.
Characteristics of the consultation. (Questions phrased from the standard form of the reporting physician)
| n = 158 | |
|---|---|
| Number of physicians that had been consulted | |
| One | 71 |
| Two | 22 |
| Three | 7 |
| SCEN-physician2 | 85 |
| General practitioner | 18 |
| Medical specialist | 30 |
| Other | 3 |
| Yes | 1 |
| One involved, the other not | 18 |
| No | 80 |
| Not clearly specified in the report | 2 |
| Unknown colleague | 39 |
| Unclear whether colleague is unknown or not | 9 |
| Known colleague 3 | 21 |
| 'SCEN-physician' | 6 |
| Other | 10 |
| Not clearly specified in the report | 24 |
1. More than one physician could have been consulted.
2. SCEN = Support and Consultation for Euthanasia in the Netherlands. A 'SCEN-physician' is a physician who has received formal training in consultation and participates in a formal network of consultants.
3. Colleague own practice/partnership/other collaboration (8%). Familiar colleague not related to own practice/partnership/other collaboration (13%).
Topics about which review committees asked for additional information (As described in the verdicts of the review committees) n = 75.
| % | (n) | % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | (8) | ||
| ▪ Being well-considered | 8 | ||
| ▪ Voluntariness | 9 | ||
| 32 | (24) | ||
| ▪ Further specification of (unbearable) suffering | 23 | ||
| ▪ Course of disease | 12 | ||
| ▪ Patient was (sub) comatose | 4 | ||
| ▪ Other | 4 | ||
| - | |||
| 1 | (1) | ||
| 41 | (31) | ||
| ▪ Quality of consultant's report | 12 | ||
| ▪ Independency of consultant | 19 | ||
| ▪ Moment of consultation | 9 | ||
| ▪ Quality of consultation | 1 | ||
| ▪ Other | 4 | ||
| 17 | (13) | ||
| ▪ Type of medication | 13 | ||
| ▪ Physician's attendance | 3 | ||
| ▪ Other | 3 | ||
| 21 | (16) | ||
| ▪ Decision-making of the physician | 1 | ||
| ▪ Quality of physician's report | 13 | ||
| ▪ Other | 11 | ||
1. More than one answer could be given.
2. In 70% of the cases, the reporting physician was also involved in the question for additional information from the review committees.