6533b838fe1ef96bd12a463b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Unsolved questions and preferred solution about living will

Tommaso D’annaLuciano SestaAntonietta LanzaroneAntonina Argo

subject

Health (social science)media_common.quotation_subjecteducationLiving WillsSettore MED/41 - AnestesiologiaMinor (academic)0603 philosophy ethics and religionAdvance directivesPathology and Forensic MedicineSettore MED/02 - Storia Della Medicina03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSettore MED/43 - Medicina LegaleIntensive carePerceptionHealth careLiving willslcsh:Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. JurisprudenceSensibility030212 general & internal medicinemedia_commonMedical educationlcsh:R5-920business.industryQuestionnaire06 humanities and the artsDirectiveVariety (cybernetics)Critical carelcsh:K1-7720Personal autonomy060301 applied ethicsPsychologybusinessLiving wills Personal autonomy End of life care Advance directives Questionnaire Critical care ResuscitationEnd of life carelcsh:Medicine (General)Law

description

Abstract Background Ethical problems about end-of-life medicine include a variety of issues approached in different ways by physicians and, more recently, special emphasis to this kind of ethical issues and possible answers has done by Italian National Ethical Committee in the issue named “Deep and continuous palliative sedation in the imminence of Death” (January, 2016). The debate is very critical in Intensive Care Units and Cancer Wards, where health care professionals face-off with terminally-ill patients is an outright routine; the Authors investigated their medical knowledge and ethical perception about patient critical and terminal condition to discuss the most relevant conclusions. Material In the Sicilian province of Palermo, physicians working in Intensive Care and Oncology fields were been given a questionnaire that takes inspiration from the Ethicatt Questionnaire-Doctor. The authors reported the results obtained, by selecting and analyzing the most involved questions about living wills. Results Generally, the respondents showed a great sensibility on this topic. Overall agreement on the living will was observed, as past surveys, but also a new conception. Euthanasia remains not very popular, attitude in line with other countries. Opinions and aptitudes of relatives have minor importance towards patient’s wishes, that are in some cases in first place. Conclusion Explicit positive answer towards dilemmas about living wills lifts the veil and reveals how these ones would represent a very useful tool for health care professionals in this study. It is also plausible that, if doctors had available an advance directive (living will) document, they would follow it, overcoming any contingent ethical objections.

10.1186/s41935-017-0036-4http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41935-017-0036-4