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Article Commentary: Palliative Care and Patient Autonomy: Moving beyond Prohibitions against Hastening Death
Author(s) -
Samuel H. LiPuma,
Joseph P. DeMarco
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
health services insights
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.739
H-Index - 12
ISSN - 1178-6329
DOI - 10.4137/hsi.s39013
Subject(s) - autonomy , bioethics , palliative care , standard of care , psychology , political science , nursing , medicine , law , law and economics , sociology , surgery
The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO) upholds policies prohibiting practices that deliberately hasten death. We find these policies overly restrictive and unreasonable. We argue that under specified circumstances it is both reasonable and morally sound to allow for treatments that may deliberately hasten death; these treatments should be part of the NHPCO guidelines. Broadening such policies would be more consistent with the gold standard of bioethical principles, ie, respecting the autonomy of competent adults.

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