Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
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To learn how many requests for voluntary active euthanasia and/or physician-assisted suicide (EAS) are made to Dutch nursing home physicians (NHPs) and how often these requests are honored. ⋯ Not many requests for EAS are made in Dutch nursing homes. Of these requests, fewer than 1 in 10 result in the actual administration of EAS. The data presented are relatively constant for the 4.5-year period studied.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The PACE pilot study: 12-month results and implications for future primary prevention trials in the elderly. (Prevention with low-dose Aspirin of Cardiovascular disease in the Elderly)
To document compliance with medication, drop-out and drop-in rates, and baseline cardiovascular event rates during the pilot phase of the PACE (Prevention with low-dose Aspirin of Cardiovascular disease in the Elderly) study. ⋯ These results suggest that any future primary prevention study of cardiovascular disease in the elderly examining the effect of low-dose aspirin on overall cardiovascular mortality will likely need to use much larger numbers of patients or use a combined end point of fatal and non-fatal ischemic events.
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To acquire data about and an understanding of the way in which Dutch nursing home physicians (NHPs) who administer voluntary active euthanasia and/or physician-assisted suicide (EAS) cope with the requirements for prudent practice. These requirements include: the patient must experience his or her suffering as unbearable and hopeless; the wish to die must be well considered and persistent; the request must be voluntary; the NHP must consult at least one other physician; the physician is not allowed to issue a certificate testifying to natural death and is obliged to keep records. ⋯ The results of this study indicate that Dutch NHPs observe all the requirements for EAS in 41% of cases. In the remaining cases, shortcomings were found: NHPs allowed too little time between the first discussion and the actual administration; they did not always keep written records; or they signed a death certificate testifying that the patient had died a natural death.