M
markomalley
Guest
From the Telegraph:
Professor Patrick Pullicino has claimed that doctors are using a care pathway designed to help make people’s final days more comfortable as an equivalent to euthanasia.
The Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP) is used in hospitals for patients who are terminally ill or are expected to die imminently. Under the pathway, doctors can withdraw treatment, food and water while patients are heavily sedated.
Almost a third of patients - 130,000 - who die in hospital or under NHS care a year are on the LCP.
So i was just curious about peoples’ opinions on this. Britain, of course, has one of the premier health systems in the world. In fact, a lot of folks he hold it up as an example for Americans to follow.
What are the ethics of this? Send that if the is a shortage of hospital rooms available, drastic actions like this might be needed to free up the rooms for the common good, right?
But what about the right to life and rapidly the dignity of the human person?
Which should take priority?
Professor Patrick Pullicino has claimed that doctors are using a care pathway designed to help make people’s final days more comfortable as an equivalent to euthanasia.
The Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP) is used in hospitals for patients who are terminally ill or are expected to die imminently. Under the pathway, doctors can withdraw treatment, food and water while patients are heavily sedated.
Almost a third of patients - 130,000 - who die in hospital or under NHS care a year are on the LCP.
So i was just curious about peoples’ opinions on this. Britain, of course, has one of the premier health systems in the world. In fact, a lot of folks he hold it up as an example for Americans to follow.
What are the ethics of this? Send that if the is a shortage of hospital rooms available, drastic actions like this might be needed to free up the rooms for the common good, right?
But what about the right to life and rapidly the dignity of the human person?
Which should take priority?