Literature DB >> 24653491

Intention, procedure, outcome and personhood in palliative sedation and euthanasia.

Lars Johan Materstvedt.   

Abstract

Palliative sedation at the end of life has become an important last-resort treatment strategy for managing refractory symptoms as well as a topic of controversy within palliative care. Furthermore, palliative sedation is prominent in the public debate about the possible legalisation of voluntary assisted dying (physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia). This article attempts to demonstrate that palliative sedation is fundamentally different from euthanasia when it comes to intention, procedure, outcome and the status of the person. Nonetheless, palliative sedation in its most radical form of terminal deep sedation parallels euthanasia in one respect: both end the experience of suffering. However, only the latter intentionally ends life and also has this as its goal. There is the danger that deep sedation could bring death forward in time due to particular side effects of the treatment. Still that would, if it happens, not be intended, and accordingly is defensible in view of the doctrine of double effect.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 24653491     DOI: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2011-000040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Support Palliat Care        ISSN: 2045-435X            Impact factor:   3.568


  9 in total

1.  Practice and documentation of palliative sedation: a quality improvement initiative.

Authors:  M McKinnon; C Azevedo; S H Bush; P Lawlor; J Pereira
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 3.677

2.  Addressing the Concerns Surrounding Continuous Deep Sedation in Singapore and Southeast Asia: A Palliative Care Approach.

Authors:  Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2015-07-15       Impact factor: 1.352

3.  Current debates on end-of-life sedation: an international expert elicitation study.

Authors:  Evangelia Evie Papavasiliou; Sheila Payne; Sarah Brearley
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2014-03-20       Impact factor: 3.603

Review 4.  Distancing sedation in end-of-life care from physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia.

Authors:  Tze Ling Gwendoline Beatrice Soh; Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna; Shin Wei Sim; Alethea Chung Peng Yee
Journal:  Singapore Med J       Date:  2016-05       Impact factor: 1.858

5.  Personhood within the context of sedation at the end of life in Singapore.

Authors:  Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2013-06-07

6.  Controversies surrounding continuous deep sedation at the end of life: the parliamentary and societal debates in France.

Authors:  Kasper Raus; Kenneth Chambaere; Sigrid Sterckx
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2016-06-29       Impact factor: 2.652

7.  How should health care providers inform about palliative sedation? A qualitative study with palliative care professionals.

Authors:  Allan Cocker; Pascal Singy; Ralf J Jox
Journal:  Eur J Cancer Care (Engl)       Date:  2022-04-29       Impact factor: 2.328

8.  Decision making in the end-of-life care of patients who are terminally ill with cancer - a qualitative descriptive study with a phenomenological approach from the experience of healthcare workers.

Authors:  Angela Luna-Meza; Natalia Godoy-Casasbuenas; José Andrés Calvache; Eduardo Díaz-Amado; Fritz E Gempeler Rueda; Olga Morales; Fabian Leal; Carlos Gómez-Restrepo; Esther de Vries
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2021-05-28       Impact factor: 3.234

9.  Palliative sedation and medical assistance in dying: Distinctly different or simply semantics?

Authors:  Reanne Booker; Anne Bruce
Journal:  Nurs Inq       Date:  2019-11-22       Impact factor: 2.658

  9 in total

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