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10 - Resolving Conflicts at the End of Life

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2022

Barbara A. Reich
Affiliation:
Western New England University School of Law
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Summary

Disputes about care for dying patients are rife with emotions. They are also, unfortunately, quite common. In the event that a patient has not made and documented end-of-life decisions in advance and loses the ability to make those decisions, the baton passes to her surrogate decision-maker. When that surrogate elects to go against the tide of family (or professional medical) thinking, or some other conflict flares up, then the worst-case scenario arises. Disputes about the care of the patient move from the bedside to a more formal setting. The incapacitated patient’s very private dying process becomes the focus of an institutional dispute resolution procedure. All of the patient’s intimate struggles – the details of her unfortunate medical plight and perhaps her family’s conflict – become public and open to discussion and debate.

Type
Chapter
Information
Intimations of Mortality
Medical Decision-Making at the End of Life
, pp. 200 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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