Sedation for Intractable Distress of a Dying Patient: Acute Palliative Care and the Principle of Double Effect
Open Access
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Oncologist
- Vol. 5 (1) , 53-62
- https://doi.org/10.1634/theoncologist.5-1-53
Abstract
Shortly before his death in 1995, Kenneth B. Schwartz, a cancer patient at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), founded The Kenneth B. Schwartz Center at MGH. The Schwartz Center is a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting and advancing compassionate health care delivery, which provides hope to the patient, support to caregivers, and encourages the healing process. The Center sponsors the Schwartz Center Rounds, a monthly multidisciplinary forum where caregivers reflect on important psychosocial issues faced by patients, their families, and their caregivers, and gain insight and support from fellow staff members. The case presented is of a young man dying of recurrent epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, distressed with stridor and severe pain, whose poorly controlled symptoms were successfully treated with an infusion of propofol, titrated to provide effective comfort in the last few hours of the patient's life. The tenet of double effect, which allows aggressive treatment of suffering in spite of foreseeable but unintended consequences, is reviewed. The patient's parents were invited and contributed to the Rounds, providing compelling testimony to the power of the presence of clinicians at the time of death and the importance of open communication about difficult ethical issues.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Rule of Double EffectArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1999
- Sedation for intractable distress in the dying–a survey of expertsPalliative Medicine, 1998
- Use of Sedation by a Hospital Palliative Care Support TeamJournal of Palliative Care, 1998
- The Rule of Double Effect — A Critique of Its Role in End-of-Life Decision MakingNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- The Supreme Court and Physician-Assisted Suicide — Rejecting Assisted Suicide but Embracing EuthanasiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- Terminal sedation in the care of dying patientsArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1996
- The use of propofol in palliative medicineJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1995
- Propofol in terminal careJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1995
- Propofol as Used for Sedation in the ICUChest, 1995
- Barbiturates in the Care of the Terminally IllNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992