“…For example, the daughter of a woman with advanced cancer who died in the intensive care unit told us she went along with a plan to intubate her mother because the physician called and told her, "Either your mom needs to be on a ventilator or she's going to die today." 1 Despite her mother's clear assertion that having life sustained by a ventilator was unacceptable, the daughter felt intubation was the right thing to do because the physician was "making the best calls for my mom." After all, why would a patient's family member consider withholding intubation when the physician said it was needed?…”
This Viewpoint expresses how use of certain language complicates decision-making for critically ill patients, and it highlights alternative phrasing for effective communication.
“…For example, the daughter of a woman with advanced cancer who died in the intensive care unit told us she went along with a plan to intubate her mother because the physician called and told her, "Either your mom needs to be on a ventilator or she's going to die today." 1 Despite her mother's clear assertion that having life sustained by a ventilator was unacceptable, the daughter felt intubation was the right thing to do because the physician was "making the best calls for my mom." After all, why would a patient's family member consider withholding intubation when the physician said it was needed?…”
This Viewpoint expresses how use of certain language complicates decision-making for critically ill patients, and it highlights alternative phrasing for effective communication.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.