D
Do_Good_Then_Go
Guest
I live in a country with universal health insurance. It is a system of providing and paying for health care, that’s all. I have to admit I’m a bit baffled by those who dismiss such systems out of hand as being somehow wrong or immoral or likely to lead to euthanasia. No system has unlimited resources.
I’ve been an RN for 25 years and I have NEVER seen a patient ignored or ‘left to die’ to free up a bed. Care pathways and the like for dying patients usually mean ‘comfort care’ which is exactly what it sounds like. Keeping a dying person comfortable. It means managing pain and other symptoms and it may mean stopping some treatments or medications because they are ineffective or causing great discomfort or obviously futile. It is a humbling and profound experience to care for a dying person and I’ve found that holds true whether or not the person caring for the patient is particularly religious or not.
I’ve been an RN for 25 years and I have NEVER seen a patient ignored or ‘left to die’ to free up a bed. Care pathways and the like for dying patients usually mean ‘comfort care’ which is exactly what it sounds like. Keeping a dying person comfortable. It means managing pain and other symptoms and it may mean stopping some treatments or medications because they are ineffective or causing great discomfort or obviously futile. It is a humbling and profound experience to care for a dying person and I’ve found that holds true whether or not the person caring for the patient is particularly religious or not.