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- Michel Daher.
- Medical Ethics & Bioethics Teaching Program, University of Balamand Saint George Hospital, Beirut, Lebanon. mndaher@inco.com.lb
- J Med Liban. 2011 Jan 1;59(1):37-9.
AbstractEnd-of-life care is an important aspect of medical practice. Individual physicians and the medical community must be committed to the compassionate and competent provision of care to dying patients and their families. Patients rightfully expect their physicians to care for them and provide them with medical assistance as they are dying. To care properly for patients near the end of life, the physician must understand that palliative care entails addressing physical, psychosocial, and spiritual needs and that patients may at times require palliative treatment in an acute care context. To provide palliative care, the physician must be up to date on the proper use of opioids and the legality and propriety of using high doses of opioids as necessary to relieve suffering. Good symptom control; ongoing involvement with the patient; and physical, psychological, and spiritual support are the hallmarks of quality end-of-life care. Care of patients near the end of life, however, has a moral, psychological, and interpersonal intensity that distinguishes it from most other clinical encounters. With appropriate education, physicians can play a key role to improve care for patients and families who are living with advanced life-threatening illness. Although some issues (e.g., the role of physician-assisted death in addressing suffering) remain very controversial, there is much common ground based on the application of the four major principles of medical ethics, nonmaleficence, beneficence, autonomy, and justice.
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