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The Ethics of Withdrawing Artificial Food and Fluid from Terminally Ill Patients: an end-of-life dilemma for Japanese nurses and familiesNagano College of Nursing, Komagane, Japan, konishi{at}nagano-nurs.ac.jp
Nagano College of Nursing, Komagane, Japan
Nagano College of Nursing, Komagane, Japan End-of-life issues have become an urgent problem in Japan, where people are among the longest lived in the world and most of them die while connected to high-technology medical equipment. This study examines a sensitive end-of-life ethical issue that concerns patients, families and nurses: the withdrawal of artificial food and fluid from terminally ill patients. A sample of 160 Japanese nurses, who completed a questionnaire that included forced-choice and open-ended questions, supported this act under only two specific conditions: if the patient requested it, and if it relieved the patients suffering. They considered that the doctors orders, the familys request, or the patients advanced age did not ethically justify this act. A small number of people who had recently lost a relative took part in semistructured interviews focusing on their experiences of their terminally ill relatives being given artificial food and fluid. Ethical, social and cultural factors surrounding this issue are discussed.
Key Words: family Japanese nurses terminally ill patients withdrawing artificial food and fluid
Nursing Ethics, Vol. 9, No. 1,
7-19 (2002) This article has been cited by other articles:
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