Rethinking Disorders of Consciousness: New Research and Its Implications. Rethinking Disorders of Consciousness: New Research and Its Implications.

Rethinking Disorders of Consciousness: New Research and Its Implications‪.‬

The Hastings Center Report 2005, March-April, 35, 2

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

Over the past several years, deciding whether to withdraw life-sustaining therapy from patients who have sustained severe brain injuries has become much more difficult. The problem is not the religious fundamentalism that infused the debate over the care of Terry Schiavo, the Florida woman in a permanent vegetative state whose case has drawn national attention. Rather, the difficulty stems from emerging knowledge about the diagnosis and physiology of brain injury and recovery. The advent of more sophisticated neuroimaging techniques like MRI and PET scans, in tandem with electrophysiologic and observational studies of brain-injured patients, have led to an effort to differentiate disorders of consciousness more precisely. The crude categories that have informed clinical practice for a quarter century are becoming obsolete. It used to be enough for a neurologist or neurosurgeon to write a note in the chart grimly recording the patient's neurological exam and then concluding with the global statement, "no hope for meaningful recovery." It can no longer be so simple. With a better understanding of brain injury and mechanisms of recovery, we should be suspicious of blanket statements that might, we now believe, obscure important differences among different patients' prospects for recovery, although even those patients we now think may recover may still be left with profound and perhaps intolerable burdens of disability.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2005
1 March
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
9
Pages
PUBLISHER
Hastings Center
SIZE
162.5
KB

More Books by The Hastings Center Report

"Nanoethics"? What's New? "Nanoethics"? What's New?
2007
Medicine's Duty to Treat Pandemic Illness: Solidarity and Vulnerability: Most Accounts of Why Physicians Have a Duty to Treat Patients During a Pandemic Look to the Special Ethical Standards of the Medical Profession. An Adequate Account Must Be Deeper and Broader: It Must Set the Professional Duty Alongside Other Individual Commitments and Broader Social Values. Medicine's Duty to Treat Pandemic Illness: Solidarity and Vulnerability: Most Accounts of Why Physicians Have a Duty to Treat Patients During a Pandemic Look to the Special Ethical Standards of the Medical Profession. An Adequate Account Must Be Deeper and Broader: It Must Set the Professional Duty Alongside Other Individual Commitments and Broader Social Values.
2009
Clinical Ethics Consulting and Conflict of Interest: Structurally Intertwined: Clinical Ethical Consultants are Subject to an Unavoidable Conflict of Interest. Their Work Requires That They be Independent, But Incentives Attached to Their Role Chip Relentlessly at Independence. This is a Problem Without Any Solution, But It can at Least be Ameliorated Through Careful Management. Clinical Ethics Consulting and Conflict of Interest: Structurally Intertwined: Clinical Ethical Consultants are Subject to an Unavoidable Conflict of Interest. Their Work Requires That They be Independent, But Incentives Attached to Their Role Chip Relentlessly at Independence. This is a Problem Without Any Solution, But It can at Least be Ameliorated Through Careful Management.
2007
Are Alcoholics Less Deserving of Liver Transplants? when Does Behavior Trigger a Lesser Claim to Medical Resources? when Does Chronic Drinking, For Example, Mean That One has a Lesser Claim to a Liver Transplant? Only when One's Behavior Becomes a Callous Indifference to Others' Needs--when One Knows the Consequences of Heavy Drinking and Knows That by Drinking One May End up Depriving Someone else of a Liver. Are Alcoholics Less Deserving of Liver Transplants? when Does Behavior Trigger a Lesser Claim to Medical Resources? when Does Chronic Drinking, For Example, Mean That One has a Lesser Claim to a Liver Transplant? Only when One's Behavior Becomes a Callous Indifference to Others' Needs--when One Knows the Consequences of Heavy Drinking and Knows That by Drinking One May End up Depriving Someone else of a Liver.
2007
Will New Ways of Creating Stem Cells Dodge the Objections? Will New Ways of Creating Stem Cells Dodge the Objections?
2005
Pushing Right Against the Evidence: Turbulent Times for Canadian Health Care. Pushing Right Against the Evidence: Turbulent Times for Canadian Health Care.
2007