Literature DB >> 8849152

Medical futility: response to critiques.

L J Schneiderman1, N S Jecker, A R Jonsen.   

Abstract

Six years ago, we proposed a patient benefit-centered definition of medical futility that included both quantitative and qualitative components. We distinguished between an effect of a treatment that is limited to some part of a patient's body and a benefit that improves the patient as a whole. The quantitative portion of our definition stipulated that physicians should regard a treatment as futile if empirical data show that the treatment has less than a 1 in 100 chance of benefiting the patient. The qualitative portion of our definition stipulated that if a treatment merely preserves permanent unconsciousness or cannot end dependence on intensive medical care, physicians should consider the treatment futile. In this paper, we clarify and modify our original proposal and respond to the following major criticisms: 1) Medical futility is simply an attempt to increase the power of the physician over the patient and to repeal recent hard-gained advances in patient autonomy; 2) no professional or societal consensus has been achieved about the definition of futility; 3) futility is a value-laden determination, the usurpation of which by medicine is inappropriate unless only a so-called value-free or strict physiologic definition of futility is used; 4) the concept of futility is not practically useful because empirical treatment data cannot be applied with certainty to any given patient; 5) futility undermines our pluralistic society and threatens, among other things, the free exercise of religion; and 6) because cost considerations will ultimately dictate all such decisions, futility is an unnecessary concept.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Analytical Approach; Death and Euthanasia

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8849152     DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-125-8-199610150-00007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-4819            Impact factor:   25.391


  25 in total

1.  Nonbeneficial or futile medical treatment: conflict resolution guidelines for the San Francisco Bay area. Bay Area Network of Ethics Committees (BANEC) Nonbeneficial Treatment Working Group.

Authors: 
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1999-05

2.  Futility has no utility in resuscitation medicine.

Authors:  M Ardagh
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 2.903

3.  Medical futility: towards consensus on disagreement.

Authors:  J T Berger; F Rosner; J Potash; P Kark; P Farnsworth; A J Bennett
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  1998-03

Review 4.  Medical futility: definition, determination, and disputes in critical care.

Authors:  James L Bernat
Journal:  Neurocrit Care       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 3.210

Review 5.  Beyond medical futility: a proposed taxonomy of ultra vires acts in medicine.

Authors:  Frederick Adolf Paola; Lois LaCivita Nixon; Robert Walker
Journal:  Intern Emerg Med       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 3.397

6.  Medical futility: a conceptual model.

Authors:  R K Mohindra
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2007-02       Impact factor: 2.903

7.  Futility and rationing in liver retransplantation: when and how can we say no?

Authors:  Scott W Biggins
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2012-02-04       Impact factor: 25.083

8.  Perceptions of "futile care" among caregivers in intensive care units.

Authors:  Robert Sibbald; James Downar; Laura Hawryluck
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2007-10-31       Impact factor: 8.262

9.  What medical futility means to clinicians.

Authors:  Mark R Tonelli
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2007-03

10.  Institutional futility policies are inherently unfair.

Authors:  Philip M Rosoff
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2013-09
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