Book contents
- Neuroprognostication in Critical Care
- Neuroprognostication in Critical Care
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chapter 1 Shared Decision Making
- Part I Disease-Specific Prognostication
- Part II Other Topics in Neuroprognostication
- Chapter 18 Prognostication in Palliative Care and Neurocritical Care
- Chapter 19 Prognostication in Chronic Critical Illness: Frailty, Geriatrics, Prior Severe Neurological Comorbidities
- Chapter 20 Prognostication in the Transition of Neurocritical Care: Neurorehabilitation and Placement, Role of Post-ICU Recovery Clinics, Insurance, Case Management
- Chapter 21 Religious and Legal Issues in Neuroprognostication
- Chapter 22 New Frontiers in Neuroprognostication: Machine Learning and AI
- Chapter 23 New Frontiers in Neuroprognostication: Biomarkers
- Chapter 24 New Frontiers in Neuroprognostication: Point-of-Care Ultrasonography
- Index
- References
Chapter 21 - Religious and Legal Issues in Neuroprognostication
from Part II - Other Topics in Neuroprognostication
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2024
- Neuroprognostication in Critical Care
- Neuroprognostication in Critical Care
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chapter 1 Shared Decision Making
- Part I Disease-Specific Prognostication
- Part II Other Topics in Neuroprognostication
- Chapter 18 Prognostication in Palliative Care and Neurocritical Care
- Chapter 19 Prognostication in Chronic Critical Illness: Frailty, Geriatrics, Prior Severe Neurological Comorbidities
- Chapter 20 Prognostication in the Transition of Neurocritical Care: Neurorehabilitation and Placement, Role of Post-ICU Recovery Clinics, Insurance, Case Management
- Chapter 21 Religious and Legal Issues in Neuroprognostication
- Chapter 22 New Frontiers in Neuroprognostication: Machine Learning and AI
- Chapter 23 New Frontiers in Neuroprognostication: Biomarkers
- Chapter 24 New Frontiers in Neuroprognostication: Point-of-Care Ultrasonography
- Index
- References
Summary
Of all areas of medicine, the practice of neurological prognostication requires one of the deepest understandings of the humanistic aspects of medicine. Neurological injuries affect the most human aspects of a patient’s life – the ability to think, feel, talk, eat, and walk. The impact of neurological injuries must be considered in the context of a patient’s and their family’s cultural, moral, and religious beliefs. Additionally, a patient’s geographical location influences their case from legal and social perspectives. Neurological prognostication for a severely brain-injured patient is practiced in a very different way by a clinician at a major medical center in New York City caring for an Orthodox Jewish patient than it is by a clinician in Bangladesh caring for a Muslim patient. All neurological prognostication requires an intimate understanding of a patient’s ethical and religious beliefs and the local laws and customs.
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- Neuroprognostication in Critical Care , pp. 297 - 304Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024