Popular Articles

British Medical Association Voices Concerns About Plans For London Hospitals
Plans to replace London"s District General Hospitals with new local hospitals providing fewer services carry clinical risks and need more thought, the BMA says today.
generic viagra online
Exercise Programs Focusing On Muscle Density Could Reduce Disability And Hospitalization Of The Elderly
Older adults who have less strength, poor physical function and low muscle density are at higher risk of being hospitalized compared to adults with more strength and better function. That"s the finding of a new study in the Journal of the American Geriatric Society.
News of the day
FDA Approves ADCIRCA(TM) (Tadalafil) Tablets For The Treatment Of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
United Therapeutics Corporation (Nasdaq: UTHR) announced that the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved ADCIRCA(TM) (tadalafil) tablets for oral administration, with a recommended dose of 40 mg, as the first once-daily phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibitor for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). ADCIRCA is indicated to improve exercise ability in WHO Group I PAH patients, which encompasses patients with multiple forms of PAH including etiologies such as idiopathic and familial PAH as well as PAH associated with scleroderma and congenital heart disease.
Nutrition

Law Study To Improve Doctors' End-Of-Life Decisions

More than 13,000 people who have lost the ability to make their own decisions die in Queensland, Victoria and New South Wales each year after doctors have withheld life-sustaining medical treatment such as CPR. The extent to which these medical decisions are legal is unknown and doctors are vulnerable to breaking the law through lack of understanding of it, say QUT law researchers, Dr Ben White and Professor Lindy Willmott, who are embarking on a $287,000 Australian Research Council Linkage-funded study to investigate doctors" understanding of the law in end-of-life decisions. "In Queensland, consent to withhold medical treatment is required by law for people who cannot make decisions for themselves, even if the doctors think that resuscitation will not help the patient or if treating them is going to be futile," Dr White said. "Consent to withhold treatment such as resuscitation can be obtained in a number of ways. For example, a patient might have an advance health directive that refuses the treatment or they might have appointed someone under an enduring power of attorney to make this decision. "If there aren"t any formal legal arrangements like these in place, the law generally recognises the decision of a family member or other person who is close to the patient as a "statutory health attorney"." Dr White said doctors and hospitals needed to know what the law was in this area because anecdotal evidence suggested their knowledge was lacking. "A second key issue is that hospitals need to ensure their policies support doctors who are making these decisions by being legally accurate. Reliance on policies that do not reflect the law puts doctors and hospitals at risk," he said. "Our research project aims to determine whether doctors know and follow the law and also to identify strategies to enhance their medical decision-making in compliance with the law." Professor Willmott said the state of the law contributed to lack of knowledge by doctors. "The law is complex and uncertain in this area so we will critically analyse the current law to suggest reforms to advance patients" autonomy and dignity, and to protect vulnerable adults from inappropriate treatment decisions," Professor Willmott said. "Clarity and consistency of laws in this area could also help reduce health costs for the community by helping doctors avoid litigation." Queensland University of Technology


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):