Seemingly intractable disagreements between parents and doctors about the treatment of gravely ill infants are neither new, nor particularly unusual. In the clinical context, proposed courses of treatment are usually discussed and agreed between the clinical team and those with parental responsibility. For critically ill infants, where withdrawal of treatment is being considered, a multidisciplinary team meeting is usually held to decide on the most appropriate course of action in light of the child’s condition and prognosis. Multiple meetings may be necessary particularly where the child’s condition is unstable, or where the diagnosis or prognosis is in doubt. While the aim of these meetings is partly about reaching a consensus, this cann...
Contemporary medical practice in the NICU sometimes leads to conflicts between providers and parents...
Who should have the ultimate say over a child’s medical treatment? A series of high-profile withdraw...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequency and background of conflicts about neonatal end-of-life (EoL) d...
The improvements in the obstetrical and neonatal diagnosis and therapies have resulted into an incre...
The provision of intensive care enables the lives of neonates, infants and children to be sustained ...
respectively Dilemmas about resuscitation and life-prolonging treatment for severely compromised inf...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Pediatric bioethics presumes that decisions should be taken in the child'...
Abstract Objective: To investigate whether parent-initiated or doctor-initiated decisions about lim...
This chapter deals with the sensitive and complex question of decision-making for critically ill chi...
This bioethics article deals with the conflict and difficulty in quality of life judgements. The imp...
<p>The improvements in the obstetrical and neonatal diagnosis and therapies have resulted into an in...
Neonatologists and parents usually agree when intensive treatment should be stopped. We describe the...
The predominant end of life scenario within paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) in the developed...
As advances in medical technology are constantly re-defining the lower limit of newborn viability, t...
The ethical issues around decision making on behalf of infants have been illuminated by two empirica...
Contemporary medical practice in the NICU sometimes leads to conflicts between providers and parents...
Who should have the ultimate say over a child’s medical treatment? A series of high-profile withdraw...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequency and background of conflicts about neonatal end-of-life (EoL) d...
The improvements in the obstetrical and neonatal diagnosis and therapies have resulted into an incre...
The provision of intensive care enables the lives of neonates, infants and children to be sustained ...
respectively Dilemmas about resuscitation and life-prolonging treatment for severely compromised inf...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Pediatric bioethics presumes that decisions should be taken in the child'...
Abstract Objective: To investigate whether parent-initiated or doctor-initiated decisions about lim...
This chapter deals with the sensitive and complex question of decision-making for critically ill chi...
This bioethics article deals with the conflict and difficulty in quality of life judgements. The imp...
<p>The improvements in the obstetrical and neonatal diagnosis and therapies have resulted into an in...
Neonatologists and parents usually agree when intensive treatment should be stopped. We describe the...
The predominant end of life scenario within paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) in the developed...
As advances in medical technology are constantly re-defining the lower limit of newborn viability, t...
The ethical issues around decision making on behalf of infants have been illuminated by two empirica...
Contemporary medical practice in the NICU sometimes leads to conflicts between providers and parents...
Who should have the ultimate say over a child’s medical treatment? A series of high-profile withdraw...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequency and background of conflicts about neonatal end-of-life (EoL) d...