Talk:Palliative sedation: Difference between revisions

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:It may read like an advocate, but isn't legally correct. Law's vary form country to country. A "living will" is of doubtful legality in America, and of no effect elsewhere. Patients do have right to refuse treatment - this isn't limited to living wills. Patients can demand life saving treatments. Whether they get it is another matter. Once a patient is no longer conscious, the clinical team cannot simply act in the patient's best interests. They must follow the directions of the legal next of kin, or any person with power of attorney for personal care.[[User:JohnC|JohnC]] ([[User talk:JohnC|talk]]) 03:18, 20 February 2011 (UTC)
:It may read like an advocate, but isn't legally correct. Law's vary form country to country. A "living will" is of doubtful legality in America, and of no effect elsewhere. Patients do have right to refuse treatment - this isn't limited to living wills. Patients can demand life saving treatments. Whether they get it is another matter. Once a patient is no longer conscious, the clinical team cannot simply act in the patient's best interests. They must follow the directions of the legal next of kin, or any person with power of attorney for personal care.[[User:JohnC|JohnC]] ([[User talk:JohnC|talk]]) 03:18, 20 February 2011 (UTC)

::What? So a person comes in with some minor injury, but noticeable bloodloss, with his heir&next of kin in tow, gets prepped for surgery and goes out... NOW the heir can fast-track himself to an inheritance and bullshit about the patient not believing in blood transfers for religious reasons or some crap like that? Or better yet just tell them to let the patient die, no need to give a reason?


==NHS Bashing?!==
==NHS Bashing?!==

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Law?

I was wondering if anyone knew the official law concerning terminal sedation. If anyone has any idea it would be greatly appreciated. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 141.233.8.152 (talkcontribs) 00:09, 8 April 2005

Terminal sedation, when used as a treatment response to terminal restlessness and agitation, should present no medico-legal problem. Using sedation inappropriately may lead to problems of professional misconduct. It would only be a problem if someone was over sedated with the intention of shortening life.
Rossodio - I note you comments re: subjectivity. However, "slow euthanasia" is unacceptable because it is not co-terminous with terminal sedation. It is itself a term that is subjective and misleading in this context. Terminal sedation is a legitimate clinical goal in all jurisprudences; euthanasia is the active shortening of life and is nothing to do with terminal sedation. Ravenswater 19:36, 30 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

In most nhs hospitals in the UK , they put all elderly patients on codeine anyway, enter non existent 'pain' on their nursing records, then finish them off with midazolam and alfentanil to alleviate non existent agitation - no one checks their controlled drugs registers, although all uk police forces have a dedicated officer who is supposed to - most of them are married to nurses, so they dont have to give anyone they consider 'elderly' any of the treatments that a 30 year old would be entitled to - its licenced murder, the way the NHS practice it in this area - quite why you are even dressing this subject up with an 'ethical discussion' I can't fathom - its murder done with smoke and mirrors, the intention is murder - it avoids blocking up nhs beds with 'lives unworthy of life' - small matter of 'consent ' is conveniently circumvented by filling them up with morphine first, and saying the loss of conciousness is due to something like a stroke to their relatives - they rely on visitors knowing absolutely nothing about doseages and respiratory side effects of 'palliative care' drugs. Its rife - but as the 'attending doctor' is the one who writes the cause of death on the death certificate, no one questions it at all . —Preceding unsigned comment added by Thomaswilliamlofthouse (talkcontribs) 01:00, 13 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

--> OMG, Do you have any reference for this? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 93.97.29.181 (talk) 18:35, 26 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]


With regards to the "License For Murder" link title: If there is a controversy regarding Terminal Sedation, a more appropriate tack would be to create a separate section with the controversy detailed in neutral POV terms, then cite the website.Dr. Scarabus (talk) 19:26, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

"Most patients die comfortably"

"Sedation is not routine in palliative and most patients die comfortably without the need for sedation."

Do you have any data to back this claim? I don't get how death is "comfortable". The outward signs may resemble sleep or comfort, but death is nothing like that as the body is violently shutting down. What if the patient is feeling extreme pain and distress, but cannot outwardly show this during their last moment due to paralysis or some other factor (ie the brain cells that receive pain input still work but those that send effector signals died off first)?

It might also be extremely distressing

(who for ? the nurses injecting the stuff mainly?) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Thomaswilliamlofthouse (talkcontribs) 01:04, 13 April 2008

if the normal reflexes aren't working and the patient may feel like they are drowning (since they can't breath due to the loss of medullary function) but there may be no convulsions to indicate this due to the same reasons as above (loss of effector signals). Then again, it might not. We can't know for sure without data. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.12.116.5 (talkcontribs) 03:37, 20 April 2006

With midazolam and alfentanil iv, the synergistic effects knock out the ability to sense CO2 levels in the blood - so all voluntary respiration stops - its used in Intensive Care for people on mechanical ventilators to stop them fighting the machine, but is administered in the NHS on side wards mainly - CO2 just builds up in the blood, but the midazolam and morphine levels are so high, they dont twitch and upset the bitches of nurses who know exactly what they are doing when they inject this stuff, and dont really give a toss one way or the other.—Preceding unsigned comment added by Thomaswilliamlofthouse (talkcontribs) 01:04, 13 April 2008
Okay - I've assumed enough good faith. You've clearly read some article in the Daily Express or some other reactionary tabloid newspaper and taken its word as gospel. As a former NHS employee I can categorically state that I have NEVER seen this occur, and I am aware of dosages. All deaths in hospital are referred to the coroner and enough of these will result in a post-mortem examination which would include toxicology. Nobody would get away with this for long and it sure as hell isn't some unwritten NHS standard practice. Either start citing credible references or leave this article well alone. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 93.97.29.181 (talk) 18:41, 26 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The fact you have never seen this arising means..you have never seen this arising . The NHS have many types of 'employee', ranging from Consultants to cleaners, you don't state which you used to be. Plenty of qualified practitioners (which you clearly are not) have 'blown the whistle' in this regard - eg see Dr. Rita Pal's 'NHS Exposed' website - and the host of other fellow professionals who used to avoid giving the lethal injections of morphine they were ordered to administer to inconvenient elderly patients by injecting it into their pillows. Thirdly, you ridiculously state 'all deaths in hospital are reported to the Coroner' - what rot! Perhaps you should research the matter at the MDU or MPS (who give advice to members on what to avoid telling the Coroner), or a host of BMJ articles. The only deaths in hospital referred to the Coroner have to be those the certifying doctor him/herself judges to be 'unexpected', or a death that takes place under an anaesthetic, or one the family reports to the coroner as suspicious or violent. Shipman didnt report the deaths of his patients to the Coroner as 'suspicious' did he??? Why dont you research Coronial Law at the Ministry of Justice before you post these ridiculous inaccuracies?? RE: Toxicology tests: you can kill someone by repeatedly infusing saline, under the guise of 'keeping the patient hydrated', you can kill with tabinsulin if a dipstick indicated to you they were 'hyperglycaemic' (theres no legal compunction to retain the dipstick to prove its administration was justified), you can kill someone with potassium suppositories - none of these drugs or metabolits show up without specific, specialised tests, and since the Coroners' are funded by local Councils, most are in severe financial deficits by mid-year, and avoid havng to pay for as many tests as possible. Most Coroner's appointed 'Ezperts' are usually retired GP's , and toxicology reports only show the drugs that the tests ordered are capable of showing (eg a basic alkaline gas screen of plasma will not reveal alfentanil or midazolam overdoseage). RE: 'They wouldnt get away with it for long' - they 'get away with it ' for long enough - Shipman 'got away with it' for almost a decade.
Either start writing valid criticisms of peoples responses to your entry, or leave Wikipedia articles to qualified professionals who research a) medical aspects and b) legal aspects competently enough yourself to produce a page worthy of entry into an Encyclopedia.
..and by the way, chum, I a) hold a Ph.D. in Physics, b) used to train Medics in Haematology (when I was a PostDoc), c) got my 'facts' from my encounters with the Coroner after watching my Father being drugged up to the gills in hospital as the ward he was on had 18 week RRT violations against it, which got the Managers in trouble with Monitor. Did you miss the Gosport War Memorial Inquest earlier this year??? 90 families do not spend 10 years fighting for an inquest unless they witnessed the same as me - —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.77.85.35 (talkcontribs) 00:42, 20 June 2009

Hey guys, LOVE that "repeatedly ordered to give lethal morphine injection (to an opiate-tolerant person!), injected it into pillow" stuff, but last time I checked, that sounds more like some nurse getting caught red-handed for vast amounts of NHS morphine "disappearing" on their shift (and going into their pockets to sell or their veins to relax)... then coming up with a valid excuse AND trying to shift the blame over to her boss, probably the guy who caught her for the morphine. 208.127.80.59 (talk) 07:10, 8 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"Change of title of article to Palliative Sedation?"

I feel this article should be changed from terminal sedation to palliative sedation. The goal of sedation is the palliation of symptoms, not the ending of life (terminal). Calling it terminal sedation implies the goal is death. Palliative sedation can be stopped and reversed or used at different levels of sedation, therefore not always happening at the same time as death. I will await comments from others before changing.SpoticusKC 05:13, 30 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Is the above request for revision to 'palliate' your own concience? Lets call a spade a spade - its manslaughter by the back door - it was used to 'palliate' 70 elderly bed blockers in a Portsmouth hospital in the Uk, none of whom were in any pain at all, there were just insufficient funds for them to be supported by social services at home - all the district sherriff could say at the inquest was that it was the strangest form of 'pain relief' he had ever seen - if he'd expressed it any harder, the doctors threatened to sue him for defamation - its murder...do you do it as part of your job, Guber? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Thomaswilliamlofthouse (talkcontribs) 01:08, 13 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • District Sherriff (sic)?! Which country do you come from again? You claim to have extensive knowledge of this case so pray enlighten us with evidence. I must say, I missed the classes on institutionalised murder at medical school. Come to think of it, I don't even remember their being on the timetable!
93.97.29.181 (talk) 15:02, 27 March 2009 (UTC)unsigned[reply]

No the request is that it more closely reflects the common medical language regarding this procedure, which you note has some controversy.SpoticusKC (talk) 11:26, 9 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]

If no one else has any objections, I will move again to rename this to palliative sedation as that is the term used by the AMA in the new ethical policy approved in June 2008. More research and articles are using the term palliative sedation then the older term terminal sedation. The reasons for the different names could be expounded upon in the article.SpoticusKC (talk) 05:16, 5 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
IT IS REFERRED TO AS 'TERMINAL SEDATION' IN THE 'WESSEX PALLIATIVE PHYSICIANS HANDBOOK' VOLUME 6 , WHICH WAS USED AS A REFERENCE GUIDE BY THE 'DOCTORS' INVOLVED IN THE DEATHS OF 90 NON-TERMINALLY ILL SENIOR CITIZENS AT THE GOSPORT WAR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL. LEAVE IT AS 'TERMINAL SEDATION' - THE ONLY INSTANCES OF TRUE 'PALLIATIVE SEDATION' I CAN THINK OF ARE WHEN SOMEONE IS COMING ROUND AFTER A MAJOR OPERATION, OR IN AN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT. UNLESS YOU FALL FOR THE 'EXISTENTIAL PAIN' GARBAGE THAT 'DOCTORS FEELING GUILTY' TRY TO FOOL THEMSELVES WITH? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sheriffspayne (talkcontribs) 15:21, 22 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Many textbooks (published years ago) may refer to 'terminal sedation' but many of the more recent journal articles as referenced on PubMed refer to 'palliative sedation.' And again there should be more discussion about the different 'terms' in the body of the article anyway. The reference to Gosport War Memorial is a straw man argument since it does not describe the standards of palliative sedation set forth by the medical community. Being a 'bed blocker' would not be an indication for palliative sedation. I am not sure what the the last questions is referring to, since it does not seem to directly address the issue of title change. Could you please clarify? Don't forget to sign any comments as well.SpoticusKC (talk) 03:38, 4 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
(and please take off your caps lock.)SpoticusKC (talk) 03:38, 4 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Although 'Palliaitve Sedation' is not an ideal term, it is now the accepted term and certainly better then 'Terminal sedation'. So I fully support this change. What is the mechanism for changing a subject heading?
--Claud Regnard (talk) 21:57, 5 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Claude, should there be a differentiation between "palliative sedation" - which could occur, for many different reasons - drug effects, drug interactions, altered biochemistry, etc, - at any time, and the specific restlessness and agitation seen at the end of life?--MisterSensible (talk) 19:41, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I am not sure as I am not a seasoned wikipedia contributor. Before changing it it may be best to flesh out a section on the alternate names and why there is a preference for one term over another so as to avoid confusion.SpoticusKC (talk) 05:12, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Legal position

While the whole article is a little NPOV, this section reads more like an advocate's position and not a neutral, disspassionate encylopedia. I think its needs to be cleaned up to a NPOV standard. I'm sadly not able to take a stab at editing it right now, but I hope someone can look at it. Caelarch (talk) 23:22, 28 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

It may read like an advocate, but isn't legally correct. Law's vary form country to country. A "living will" is of doubtful legality in America, and of no effect elsewhere. Patients do have right to refuse treatment - this isn't limited to living wills. Patients can demand life saving treatments. Whether they get it is another matter. Once a patient is no longer conscious, the clinical team cannot simply act in the patient's best interests. They must follow the directions of the legal next of kin, or any person with power of attorney for personal care.JohnC (talk) 03:18, 20 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What? So a person comes in with some minor injury, but noticeable bloodloss, with his heir&next of kin in tow, gets prepped for surgery and goes out... NOW the heir can fast-track himself to an inheritance and bullshit about the patient not believing in blood transfers for religious reasons or some crap like that? Or better yet just tell them to let the patient die, no need to give a reason?

NHS Bashing?!

I'm concerned by the use of quotes around 'best interests' in the risk assesment section. Partucularly their use in the following:

"busy NHS teams can decide it is in their 'best interests' to withold all treatments, and this is common, particularly with elderly or disabled patients."

It seems to imply that under the NHS clinical staff will withhold treatment on cost grounds, or because docs/nurses are too lazy to care for their patients. It clearly has no place on wikipedia. Especially as no citations is given.

Worse still:

"Sensible patients can therefore, under UK law, give a directive that they refuse 'Palliative Care' or 'Terminal Sedation', or 'any drug likely to supress my respiration' in a 'living will' or 'Advance Directive', and avoid being involuntarily euthenased, but it is imperative that these phrases are explicitly included in the advance directive."

--This is hardly encyclopaedic prose. I'm cleaning up this section post haste. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 93.97.29.181 (talk) 18:24, 26 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]