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Compassion & Choices, an advocacy group for "aid in dying" at the end of life, reports that Idaho Gov. Butch Otter, in a letter to the Idaho Senate, encouraged the legislature to revisit a particular bill.
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Although most patient care scenarios can be worked out through careful communication with all those involved, there are certain situations where even greater diplomacy may be required on the part of ethics consultants.
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The policy for deactivation of an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) at Hospice of the Western Reserve in Cleveland, OH, clearly spells out the steps and responsibilities of deactivating an ICD's shocking program.
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The patient was dying of lung cancer and planned to die at home with his family nearby. Instead, he was raced to the emergency department as he died because his implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) kept firing an electrical impulse to restore his heart rhythm.
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In a memorandum, President Obama has asked Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, to develop guidance for hospitals participating in Medicare or Medicaid to ensure that patients' advance directives are respected.
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Patient care is always the hospice nurse's first priority rather than documentation, but in today's legal and regulatory environment, documentation of all aspects of nursing care is critical.
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While there are certain scenarios regarding patient care when what is written in the law might seem to counter what is ethically appropriate, in general, the law and ethics complement each other in the health care arena, according to ethical experts interviewed by AHC Media, publisher of Hospice Management Advisor.
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The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced a new initiative to address safety problems associated with external infusion pumps.
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The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) sent a letter to Baxter Healthcare Corp. on April 30 ordering the company to recall and destroy all of its Colleague Volumetric Infusion Pumps in use in the United States.
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Bilateral absence of N20 responses in the setting of therapeutic hypothermia does not preclude neurologic recovery in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest.