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Continuing Care01:25

Continuing Care

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Continuing care describes the variety of health, personal, and social services provided over a prolonged period. The need for continuing care is increasing because people are living longer. Many people do not have families or others to care for them. Continuing care is mainly for patients who are disabled, functionally dependent, or suffering from a terminal disease. It is available within institutional settings or in homes. Examples include nursing centers or facilities, assisted living,...
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Ethical principles are essential in guiding nurses to fulfill their responsibilities, focusing on the quality of nursing care and decision-making. These principles, including autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice, and fidelity, shape the ethical framework within healthcare settings.
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Elisabeth Kübler-Ross significantly advanced psychology's understanding of the process of dying with her influential book, On Death and Dying (1969). She focused on studying terminally ill individuals and outlined five stages commonly experienced when coping with death: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.
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Eye-Tracking Control to Assess Cognitive Functions in Patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
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Palliative care-based arguments against assisted dying.

Ben Colburn1

  • 1Department of Philosophy, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland.

Bioethics
|October 3, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Legalizing assisted dying does not negatively impact palliative care quality or access. This study refutes claims that assisted dying worsens end-of-life care, access to palliative services, or patient choice.

Keywords:
assisted dyingcriminal lawethicseuthanasiapalliative care

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Ethics
  • Palliative Care Research
  • End-of-Life Studies

Background:

  • Opponents of legal assisted dying frequently claim it degrades palliative care quality.
  • These claims suggest negative impacts on access, patient choice, and service growth.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically evaluate five common assertions linking legal assisted dying to diminished palliative care.
  • To examine the evidence base for claims that assisted dying negatively affects palliative care.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of arguments and evidence concerning palliative care in jurisdictions with legal assisted dying.
  • Systematic review of claims regarding palliative care access, quality, patient choice, and service growth.

Main Results:

  • No evidence supports claims of difficulty accessing expert palliative care where assisted dying is legal.
  • Countries with legal assisted dying do not rank low in end-of-life care quality.
  • Legalization of assisted dying does not impede palliative care growth or stall service expansion.

Conclusions:

  • The assertion that legal assisted dying worsens palliative care is not supported by evidence.
  • Arguments against legal assisted dying based on negative impacts on palliative care lack substantiation.
  • Further research should focus on objective data rather than unsubstantiated claims.