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      When life-sustaining treatment is withdrawn and the patient doesn't die.

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          Abstract

          One of the most difficult decisions that doctors and parents must make is the decision to withdraw life-sustaining treatment. Doctors find it easier to withdraw treatments in situations where withdrawal will be rapidly fatal rather than in situations in which treatment withdrawal will lead to a prolonged dying process. Mechanical ventilation is usually such a treatment. Withdrawal of ventilation generally leads to the patient's rapid demise. Doctors may tell parents that death will occur quickly after a ventilator is withdrawn. But what happens when the doctors are wrong and a patient survives without life support? What should doctors do next? We present a case in which that happened and asked 3 experts to comment on the case. Stefan Kutzsche is a senior consultant in neonatology at Oslo University Hospital Ulleval in Norway. John Colin Partridge is a neonatologist and professor of pediatrics at University of California, San Francisco. Steven R. Leuthner is a neonatologist and professor of pediatrics and bioethics at the Medical College of Wisconsin. They each recommend slightly different approaches to this dilemma.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Pediatrics
          Pediatrics
          1098-4275
          0031-4005
          Nov 2013
          : 132
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Children's Mercy Hospital, 2401 Gillham Rd, Kansas City, MO, 64108. jlantos@cmh.edu.
          Article
          peds.2013-0413
          10.1542/peds.2013-0413
          24101767
          242883b7-7f70-481a-a4f4-8d8a91f6c35a
          History

          Ethics,palliative care,prognostication,withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment

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