Emergency medicine and futile care: Taking the road less travelled |
| |
Authors: | Alan E O'Connor Sarah Winch William Lukin Malcolm Parker |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Emergency Medicine, The Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital,;2. School of Medicine, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia;3. School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane and |
| |
Abstract: | Debate around medical futility has produced a vast literature that continues to grow. Largely absent from the broader literature is the role of emergency medicine in either starting measures that prove to be futile, withholding treatment or starting the end of life communication process with patients and families. In this discussion we review the status of the futility debate in general, identify some of the perceived barriers in managing futile care in the ED including the ethical and legal issues, and establish the contribution of emergency medicine in this important debate. We conclude that emergency physicians have the clinical ability and the legal and moral standing to resist providing futile treatment. In these situations they can take a different path that focuses on comfort care thereby initiating the process of the much sought after ‘good death’. |
| |
Keywords: | emergency medicine futility medical ethics medical law palliative medicine |
|
|