Literature DB >> 19897766

Ethical issues in artificial nutrition and hydration: a review.

Cynthia M A Geppert1, Maria R Andrews, Mary Ellen Druyan.   

Abstract

Healthcare professionals often face clinical and ethical challenges when charged with making decisions related to provision or lack of provision of artificial nutrition and hydration. The intent of this review is to supply a framework of clinical practices, ethical principles, legal precedents, and professional guidelines that will impart information and can assist decision making regarding artificial nutrition and hydration. Comprehensive understanding of the theory and practice of informed consent for competent adults, decisionally incompetent adults, and minors is necessary for making valid clinical judgments and for guiding patients and their families or surrogates in choosing options related to initiating, withholding, or withdrawing artificial nutrition and hydration. The framework offered in this review can serve as a basis for evaluation of appropriateness of artificial nutrition and hydration in 3 common conditions in which decision making is particularly challenging: terminal illness, advanced dementia, and a persistent vegetative state. The framework facilitates guidance for institutional policy makers and individual nutrition support professionals dealing with situations in which personal values often create ethical dilemmas related to artificial nutrition and hydration and its utility.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19897766     DOI: 10.1177/0148607109347209

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr        ISSN: 0148-6071            Impact factor:   4.016


  5 in total

1.  Nutrition in severe dementia.

Authors:  Glaucia Akiko Kamikado Pivi; Paulo Henrique Ferreira Bertolucci; Rodrigo Rizek Schultz
Journal:  Curr Gerontol Geriatr Res       Date:  2012-05-08

2.  A comprehensive intervention following the clinical pathway of eating and swallowing disorder in the elderly with dementia: historically controlled study.

Authors:  Masahisa Arahata; Makoto Oura; Yuka Tomiyama; Naoe Morikawa; Hatsue Fujii; Shinji Minani; Yukihiro Shimizu
Journal:  BMC Geriatr       Date:  2017-07-14       Impact factor: 3.921

3.  Deaths after feeding-tube withdrawal from patients in vegetative and minimally conscious states: A qualitative study of family experience.

Authors:  Jenny Kitzinger; Celia Kitzinger
Journal:  Palliat Med       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 4.762

4.  To hydrate or not to hydrate? The effect of hydration on survival, symptoms and quality of dying among terminally ill cancer patients.

Authors:  Chien-Yi Wu; Ping-Jen Chen; Tzu-Lin Ho; Wen-Yuan Lin; Shao-Yi Cheng
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2021-01-12       Impact factor: 3.234

Review 5.  The Difficult Decision Not to Prescribe Artificial Nutrition by Health Professionals and Family: Bioethical Aspects.

Authors:  Andrea Z Pereira; Selma Freire de Carvalho da Cunha; Henrique Grunspun; Marco Aurelio Scarpinella Bueno
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2022-03-03
  5 in total

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