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  1. Postmortem procedures in the emergency department: using the recently dead to practise and teach.K. V. Iserson -1993 -Journal of Medical Ethics 19 (2):92-98.
    In generations past, it was common practice for doctors to learn lifesaving technical skills on patients who had recently died. But this practice has lately been criticised on religious, legal, and ethical grounds, and has fallen into disuse in many hospitals and emergency departments. This paper uses four questions to resolve whether doctors in emergency departments should practise and teach non-invasive and minimally invasive procedures on the newly dead: Is it ethically and legally permissible to practise and teach non-invasive and (...) minimally invasive procedures on the newly dead emergency-department patient? What are the alternatives or possible consequences of not practising non-invasive and minimally invasive procedures on newly dead patients? Is consent from relatives required? Should doctors in emergency departments allow or even encourage this use of newly dead patients? (shrink)
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  • Survey of State EMS-DNR Laws and Protocols.Charles P. Sabatino -1999 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (4):297-315.
    This article details the results of a national survey conducted in 1999 of statewide laws and protocols providing for the creation and recognition of donot- resuscitate orders effective in nonhospital settings. Applicable primarily to emergency medical services personnel, most of these laws and protocols have been in existence for less than ten years, and there is little current comparative information on them. Such policies are commonly called out-of-hospital or prehospital DNR orders, although one state-Virginia-recently amended its DNR law to establish (...) a durable DNR order applicable to all health care providers and all settings. I will refer to the laws and policies examined here interchangeably as out-of hospital DNR protocols or EMS-DNR protocols. The survey produced a descriptive snapshot of such laws and protocols in effect on a statewide basis as of March 1999. (shrink)
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  • Willful Death and Painful Decisions: A Failed Assisted Suicide.Kenneth V. Iserson,Dorothy Rasinski Gregory,Kate Christensen &Marc R. Ofstein -1992 -Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (2):147.
    The patient was a woman in her 30s who, until the rapid progression of an ultimately fatal neurologic disease, had been a very successful professional, enjoying athletics and an active social life. In the 6 months of swift deterioration, she had gone from being extremely vibrant and energetic to being totally unable to care for her personal needs. There had been no loss of intellectual capacity. Her sister later recounted to Dr. J., the emergency department physician, that she had found (...) the patient unconscious and unresponsive at home and had immediately called the patient's neurologist in a neighboring city. He directed her to call the paramedics. (shrink)
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  • Development of a county pre-hospital DNR program: Contributions of a bioethics network. [REVIEW]Ronald B. Miller,Timothy W. Gawron,Richard T. Pitts,Robert H. Bade,Betty O'Rourke,Dorothy Rasinski-Gregory &Martha Aleman -1992 -HEC Forum 4 (3):175-186.
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