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Hospice Nurse Ethics and Institutional Policies Toward Medical Aid in Dying. | LitMetric

Hospice Nurse Ethics and Institutional Policies Toward Medical Aid in Dying.

Am J Nurs

Jean Abbott is a professor emerita at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora. Jeanne Kerwin is a consultant in bioethics and palliative care at Atlantic Health System, Morristown, NJ. Constance Holden is retired nursing director and current ethics consultation team and ethics committee member at Boulder Community Health, Boulder, CO. Margaret Pabst Battin is a medical ethicist and distinguished professor at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Charles Miller is a physician at Kaiser Permanente Hawaii. Thaddeus Mason Pope is a professor of law at Mitchell Hamline School of Law, St. Paul, MN. The authors acknowledge Thalia DeWolf, BSN, RN, CHPN, PHN, the hospice nurse who shared with us her patient dilemma and its consequences, triggering this ethical analysis. Contact author: Jean Abbott, . The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Published: June 2023

A significant number of hospices in U.S. jurisdictions where medical aid in dying is legal have implemented policies that require nurses to leave the room when a patient ingests aid-in-dying medication. Two questions with ethical implications arise from these policies: (1) Is it ethically supportable for a hospice to require that staff leave the room while a patient ingests aid-in-dying medication? and (2) Does this requirement compromise the nurse's professional commitment to the patient and family?This article reviews the origins of this common policy, as well as nursing codes of ethics and professional organization policy statements as they relate to nursing commitments to patients. It finds that an institutional policy requiring nurses to leave the room while a patient ingests aid-in-dying medication risks violating professional nursing standards, reinforces stigma regarding medical aid in dying, and potentially abandons patients and loved ones at a critical time in their passage toward a desired and legal death. The authors describe a case that depicts these three potential risks, concluding that even if such policies are not legally prohibited by state aid-in-dying statutes, hospices should eliminate them or at least be transparent about the practice and its rationale before accepting patients who request medical aid in dying.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.NAJ.0000938728.13124.c3DOI Listing

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