Withholding/withdrawing treatment from neonates: legislation and official guidelines across Europe.
Open Access
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Medical Ethics
- Vol. 25 (6) , 440-446
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jme.25.6.440
Abstract
Representatives from eight European countries compared the legal, ethical and professional settings within which decision making for neonates takes place. When it comes to limiting treatment there is general agreement across all countries that overly aggressive treatment is to be discouraged. Nevertheless, strong emphasis has been placed on the need for compassionate care even where cure is not possible. Where a child will die irrespective of medical intervention, there is widespread acceptance of the practice of limiting aggressive treatment or alleviating suffering even if death may be hastened as a result. Where the infant could be saved but the future outlook is bleak there is more debate, but only two countries have tested the courts with such cases. When it comes to the active intentional ending of life, the legal position is standard across Europe; it is prohibited. However, recognising those intractable situations where death may be lingering and unpleasant, Dutch paediatricians have reported that they do sometimes assist babies to die with parental consent. Two cases have been tried through the courts and recent official recommendations have set out standards by which such actions may be assessed.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Medical end-of-life decisions made for neonates and infants in the NetherlandsThe Lancet, 1997
- Les prises de décisions éthiques en réanimation néonatale. Enquête auprès des soignants de deux centres françaisArchives de Pédiatrie, 1997
- Evaluation of the Notification Procedure for Physician-Assisted Death in the NetherlandsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Foregoing intensive care treatment in newborn infants with extremely poor prognoses:The Journal of Pediatrics, 1996
- Prolonging life and allowing death: infants.Journal of Medical Ethics, 1995
- A Dutch report on the ethics of neonatal care.Journal of Medical Ethics, 1995
- Pediatric EuthanasiaArchives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1992
- Euthanasia in the NetherlandsHastings Center Report, 1992
- Withdrawing from invasive neonatal intensive carePublished by Springer Nature ,1989
- Euthanasia, withholding life-prolonging treatment, and moral differences between killing and letting die.Journal of Medical Ethics, 1988