• Arch Intern Med · Feb 2000

    Comparative Study

    Prevalence and content analysis of guidelines on handling requests for euthanasia or assisted suicide in Dutch nursing homes.

    • I Haverkate, M T Muller, M Cappetti, F J Jonkers, and G van der Wal.
    • Institute for Research in Extramural Medicine, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. I.Haverkate.gpnh@med.vu.nl
    • Arch Intern Med. 2000 Feb 14;160(3):317-22.

    BackgroundThe growing number of requests for euthanasia or assisted suicide (EAS) makes it imperative for health care institutions, such as nursing homes, to have written guidelines on how to handle requests for EAS. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of EAS guidelines in Dutch nursing homes and to analyze the content.MethodsDirectors of patient care in 324 Dutch nursing homes were asked, by means of a mailed short list of questions, if they had an institutional guideline on EAS and, if so, to provide a copy. Guidelines were analyzed according to a structured list of items based on current jurisprudence, model documents, and opinions of experts.ResultsOf the 324 directors, 313 (97%) responded. In 58% of the nursing homes that responded, there existed written guidelines for EAS. Of those guidelines, 74% concerned EAS; in 26%, EAS was integrated in a guideline on terminal care. Of the guidelines, 165 (90%) were based on the policy that EAS is acceptable under specific conditions, and 18 (10%) banned EAS completely. Of the first-mentioned guidelines, 81% described one or more procedures for in-principle objections. In 65% of these guidelines, all official requirements for prudent practice were described.ConclusionsDespite the rapidly growing number of nursing-home guidelines on EAS and the existence of model documents, there is still considerable variation in the guidelines, and they can be improved in many aspects. A basic prerequisite is that the guidelines include all the official requirements for prudent practice.

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