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Keywords Voluntary Stopping of Eating a...

Voluntary Stopping of Eating and Drinking

https://read.qxmd.com/read/29801138/voluntary-stopping-and-eating-and-drinking-among-patients-with-serious-advanced-illness-a-label-in-search-of-a-problem-reply
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timothy E Quill, Linda Ganzini, Robert D Truog, Thaddeus Mason Pope
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 1, 2018: JAMA Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29691695/-erratum-to-voluntary-stopping-eating-and-drinking-vsed-a-position-paper-of-the-austrian-palliative-society
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angelika Feichtner, Dietmar Weixler, Alois Birklbauer
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 2018: Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29651244/ethical-challenges-for-an-understanding-of-suffering-voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-and-the-wish-to-hasten-death-in-advanced-patients
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea Rodríguez-Prat, Cristina Monforte-Royo, Albert Balaguer
Some persons with advanced disease but no significant cognitive impairments consciously decide to stop taking food and fluids orally, even though they remain physically able to do so. The question is to what extent voluntarily stopping eating and drinking (VSED) may be considered an expression of a wish to hasten death, in the sense that the latter has been defined recently. We analyze the data reported in some studies in relation to primary care patients who died as a result of VSED and examine their results in light of the qualitative findings of patients that expressed a wish to die...
2018: Frontiers in Pharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29532465/voluntary-stopping-eating-and-drinking
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John W Wax, Amy W An, Nicole Kosier, Timothy E Quill
Voluntary stopping of eating and drinking (VSED) is a deliberate, self-initiated attempt to hasten death in the setting of suffering refractory to optimal palliative interventions or prolonged dying that a person finds intolerable. Individuals who consider VSED tend to be older, have a serious but not always imminently terminal illness, place a high value on independence, and have significant illness burden. VSED can theoretically be performed independent of clinician assistance and therefore avoids many of the ethical and legal concerns associated with physician-assisted dying or other palliative measures of last resort, However, VSED is an intense process fraught with new sources of somatic and emotional suffering for individuals and their caregivers, so VSED is best supervised by an experienced, well-informed clinician who can provide appropriate pre-intervention assessment, anticipatory guidance, medical treatment of symptoms, and emotional support...
March 2018: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29488035/-voluntary-stopping-eating-and-drinking-vsed-a-position-paper-of-the-austrian-palliative-society
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angelika Feichtner, Dietmar Weixler, Alois Birklbauer
In some cases terminally ill patients fear of prolonged dying and suffering can manifest itself in the voluntary refusal of food and fluids, aiming to accelerate the dying process. This represents a considerable area of conflict, because of the ethical responsibility to not aid a person's death but also to respect a patients autonomy.There is a clear separation between an assisted suicide and following a patient's wishes. Not to accept the voluntary refusal of FVNF would have to be considered as forced treatment of patients while they are capable of self-determination...
May 2018: Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29052518/voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-is-medical-support-ethically-justified
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ralf J Jox, Isra Black, Gian Domenico Borasio, Johanna Anneser
BACKGROUND: Physician-assisted dying has been the subject of extensive discussion and legislative activity both in Europe and North America. In this context, dying by voluntary stopping of eating and drinking (VSED) is often proposed, and practiced, as an alternative method of self-determined dying, with medical support for VSED being regarded as ethically and legally justified. ARGUMENT: In our opinion, this view is flawed. First, we argue that VSED falls within the concept of suicide, albeit with certain unique features (non-invasiveness, initial reversibility, resemblance to the natural dying process)...
October 20, 2017: BMC Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27763399/vsed-death-with-dignity-or-without
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark Corbett
Conceivably, in an ideal world, all patients with a life-limiting illness would receive optimal hospice and palliative care so that no one would ever wish to hasten their own death. The reality, however, is that despite provision of optimal hospice and palliative care, individuals with terminal illness experience suffering, loss of meaning, or deterioration in quality of life to the extent where they express the desire to expedite the dying process. While there has been extensive discussion surrounding physician-assisted death (PAD), there has been less attention paid to the practice of voluntary stopping eating and drinking (VSED) near the end of life...
2016: Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27763391/voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-a-patient-s-right-to-choose-or-an-act-of-suicide
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wendy Kohlhase
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2016: Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26371259/voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-vsed-physician-assisted-suicide-pas-or-neither-in-the-last-stage-of-life-pas-no-vsed-it-depends
#29
EDITORIAL
Lynn A Jansen
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
September 2015: Annals of Family Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26371258/voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-vsed-physician-assisted-death-pad-or-neither-in-the-last-stage-of-life-both-should-be-available-as-a-last-resort
#30
EDITORIAL
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26306358/voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-an-ethical-alternative-to-physician-assisted-suicide
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vicki D Lachman
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2015: Medsurg Nursing: Official Journal of the Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26182261/-care-for-patients-who-choose-hastened-death-by-voluntarily-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alfred Simon, Nina Luisa Hoekstra
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
July 2015: Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25715538/voluntary-palliated-starvation-a-lawful-and-ethical-way-to-die
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ben White, Lindy Willmott, Julian Savulescu
Increasingly, individuals want control over their own destiny. This includes the way in which they die and the timing of their death. The desire for self-determination at the end of life is one of the drivers for the ever-increasing number of jurisdictions overseas that are legalising voluntary euthanasia and/or assisted suicide, and for the continuous attempts to reform State and Territory law in Australia. Despite public support for law reform in this field, legislative change in Australia is unlikely in the near future given the current political landscape...
December 2014: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24810185/artificial-nutrition-at-the-end-of-life-ethical-issues
#34
REVIEW
Suzanne van de Vathorst
Artificial nutrition is a medical treatment that first of all needs a sound scientific base before prescribing it. This base is absent for dying patients and patients in the end stage of dementia. Because feeding is a very emotional and symbolical issue, patient and family may request this treatment despite the lack of evidence. These issues should be addressed in good communication with patient and relatives. For comatose patients and patients in a persistent vegetative state artificial nutrition is a necessary support to bridge the time until either recovery is imminent or improbable...
April 2014: Best Practice & Research. Clinical Gastroenterology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24400678/voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking-at-the-end-of-life-a-systematic-search-and-review-giving-insight-into-an-option-of-hastening-death-in-capacitated-adults-at-the-end-of-life
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nataša Ivanović, Daniel Büche, André Fringer
BACKGROUND: The terminally ill person's autonomy and control are important in preserving the quality of life in situations of unbearable suffering. Voluntary stopping of eating and drinking (VSED) at the end of life has been discussed over the past 20 years as one possibility of hastening death. This article presents a 'systematic search and review' of published literature concerned with VSED as an option of hastening death at the end of life by adults with decision-making capacity. METHODS: Electronic databases PubMed, EBSCOhost CINAHL and Ovid PsycINFO were systematically searched...
2014: BMC Palliative Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23167423/health-behavior-after-a-multiprofessional-intervention-and-training-for-ongoing-volunteer-based-community-health-programme-intervention-in-the-north-east-of-thailand-what-changed-and-what-not
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kesinee Saranrittichai, Wiporn Senarak, Supannee Promthet, Surapon Wiangnon, Patravoot Vatanasapt, Supot Kamsa-Ard, Prasert Wongphuthorn, Malcolm Anthony Moore
This qualitative research within the project entitled "Multiprofessional Intervention and training for Ongoing Volunteer-based Community Health Programs in the Northeast of Thailand (MITV-NET) " was aimed at explaining changes of health behavior of community people in the Northeast after the intervention. The participants comprised 15 community volunteers and 27 villagers. Data were collected by indepth interview, focus group discussion, participation and non-participation observation, and note taking. Analyses were conducted in parallel with data collection, through content and comparative analysis...
2012: Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention: APJCP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19896573/responding-to-suffering-providing-options-and-respecting-choice
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zail S Berry
Voluntary stopping of eating and drinking (VSED) as a legal means to hasten death has been discussed by some as an option for persons who wish to end their lives. A case is presented of a woman who elected to forgo eating and drinking to end intractable suffering. The potential for benefit and harm in physicians discussing VSED is discussed. Physicians working with terminally ill patients need to consider the discussion of VSED as a therapeutic tool in their support and care of patients with intractable suffering...
November 2009: Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19868809/the-influence-of-the-adrenal-glands-on-resistance-i-the-susceptibility-of-adrenalectomized-rats-to-morphine
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
W J Scott
1. The majority of rats (Mus norvegicus), because of accessory cortical tissue, will survive double adrenalectomy indefinitely under optimum conditions. 2. Resistance to morphine is greatly diminished in healthy adrenalectomized rats tested before hypertrophy of the accessories occurs. 3. This greater sensitiveness seems to be due to some fundamental alteration in metabolism dependent on a partial adrenal insufficiency. Protocol 1.-Rat 13; brown and white, male. Sept. 15, 1922. In stock. Sept. 18. Active, vigorous, and very vicious...
October 31, 1923: Journal of Experimental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15449813/no-safe-harbor-the-principle-of-complicity-and-the-practice-of-voluntary-stopping-of-eating-and-drinking
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lynn A Jansen
In recent years, a number of writers have proposed voluntary stopping of eating and drinking as an alternative to physician-assisted suicide. This paper calls attention to and discusses some of the ethical complications that surround the practice of voluntary stopping of eating and drinking. The paper argues that voluntary stopping of eating and drinking raises very difficult ethical questions. These questions center on the moral responsibility of clinicians who care for the terminally ill as well as the nature and limits of the authority they exercise over them...
February 2004: Journal of Medicine and Philosophy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15066105/rational-suicide-uncertain-moral-ground
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen L Rich, Janie B Butts
BACKGROUND: The ambiguities involving end-of-life issues, such as physician-assisted suicide and voluntary stopping of eating and drinking, have caused a blurring of the definition of rational suicide and have prompted rich dialogue with moral deliberations that seem to be on disparate paths among bioethicists and other health care professionals. With the evolution of advanced medical technology extending life expectancy in older, disabled, and terminally ill people, rational suicide has become a critical issue of debate...
May 2004: Journal of Advanced Nursing
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