October
31
  2:53:01 AM

Nurses to decide life and death in UK

British nurses are to be authorised to decide whether patients should be revived with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The new rule is aimed to prevent the "unnecessary: resuscitation of seriously ill patients. Defenders of the new regulation point out that survival rates for CPR can be as low as 5%. They argue that patients should be allowed to die in peace rather than be subjected to the indignity of repeated attempts to revive them. However, Dr Peter Saunders, general secretary of the Christian Medical Fellowship, says: "There is absolutely no way this can be delegated to nursing staff. It's unfair on them to make such a call - they have neither the training nor the experience."


 

 Search BioEdge

 Subscribe to BioEdge newsletter
rss Subscribe to BioEdge RSS feed

 Best of the web

 Recent Posts
Indian surrogate for US woman dies in Gurjarat
18 May 2012
Do reproductive rights survive gender reassignment?
19 May 2012
South African activists begin euthanasia campaign
19 May 2012
70 assisted suicides in Washington state in 2011
19 May 2012
Would-be grandparents pay for their daughters’ egg freezing
19 May 2012

 Tags
Australia, human drama, assisted suicide, neuroscience, informed consent, organ donation, India, Down syndrome, commercialization, IVF, clinical trials, suicide, genetic testing, sex selection, embryonic stem cells, organ trafficking, Netherlands, euthanasia, bioethics, surrogacy, UK, sperm donation, China, law, organ transplants, US, research, stem cells, abortion, Canada,