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Senior nurses to decide whether patients should be resuscitated

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Sheekadaan siday u socoto uma bogin. Sahalkaan miyaa la isku qaarajinaa?

 

Senior nurses to decide whether patients should be resuscitated

 

Senior nurses will be allowed to veto the resuscitation of patients under new guidelines issued yesterday by the medical profession.

 

The British Medical Association said patients should be spared "undignified and unnecessary" attempts to revive them when there could be no realistic hope of success.

 

The guidelines tell doctors to weigh up the benefits and risks of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) when a patient stops breathing or the heart stops beating. They should consider the damage to vital organs that could be caused by CPR and take into account the likely views of the patient about the lasting medical consequences of being brought back from the dead.

 

Under the old rules, a decision not to resuscitate had to be made by a hospital consultant or GP. The new guidelines extend the power to consultant nurses and specialists in palliative care.

 

David Pitcher, of the Resuscitation Council, said survival rates after resuscitation were as low as 5% in some circumstances, and patients' families were often given over-optimistic expectations by television dramas.

 

Dr Pitcher said: "It is not always appropriate to distress a person who is dying, perhaps in the last few days of life, by discussing attempted resuscitation when clearly CPR would not be successful."

 

Peter Carter, general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said: "This guidance should help spare patients and their families the heartache and indignity of repeated and sometimes unnecessary resuscitation attempts.

 

It will also mean that when a suitably experienced nurse believes that CPR will not be successful, they will be able to respond appropriately without having to wait for a GP or consultant."

 

Vivienne Nathanson, the BMA's head of science and ethics, said: "The primary role of medicine is to benefit patients and when treatment can no longer achieve this, it is good practice to avoid further invasive and burdensome interventions.

"CPR also carries the risk of internal fractures and ruptures and there is a risk of long-term brain damage ... Health professionals need to be honest with patients about the likelihood and the level of recovery they can reasonably expect if CPR is attempted."

 

Dr Nathanson said people may be able to express their wishes about resuscitation on an electronic patient record being prepared by the NHS.

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