End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God?
Advances in neonatal care now enable more infants to be kept alive despite clear clinical evidence of inevitable or imminent death on a life-support system. It is therefore no longer acceptable to the society that a patient is left to die in the hospital, without any form of treatment or intervent...
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iium-348562014-01-25T18:19:30Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/34856/ End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? Ngow, Harris Abdullah WMN, Wan Khairina R Medicine (General) Advances in neonatal care now enable more infants to be kept alive despite clear clinical evidence of inevitable or imminent death on a life-support system. It is therefore no longer acceptable to the society that a patient is left to die in the hospital, without any form of treatment or intervention. We report a case of severe birth asphyxia, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, neonatal seizures and left cephalohematoma. In spite of initial successful resuscitation, the infant could not survive until all possible methods of treatment were exhausted. This case illustrates one of many examples of the process involved in dealing with ending of life decision in a condition considered as futile. The Faculty of Medicine, International Islamic University Malaysia 2013-12 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/34856/1/End_of_Life_Decision.pdf Ngow, Harris Abdullah and WMN, Wan Khairina (2013) End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? The International Medical Journal Malaysia, 12 (2). pp. 67-70. ISSN 1823-4631 |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Local University |
institution |
International Islamic University Malaysia |
building |
IIUM Repository |
collection |
Online Access |
language |
English |
topic |
R Medicine (General) |
spellingShingle |
R Medicine (General) Ngow, Harris Abdullah WMN, Wan Khairina End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? |
description |
Advances in neonatal care now enable more infants to be kept alive despite clear clinical evidence of inevitable
or imminent death on a life-support system. It is therefore no longer acceptable to the society that a patient
is left to die in the hospital, without any form of treatment or intervention. We report a case of severe birth
asphyxia, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, neonatal seizures and left cephalohematoma. In spite of initial
successful resuscitation, the infant could not survive until all possible methods of treatment were exhausted.
This case illustrates one of many examples of the process involved in dealing with ending of life decision in a
condition considered as futile. |
format |
Article |
author |
Ngow, Harris Abdullah WMN, Wan Khairina |
author_facet |
Ngow, Harris Abdullah WMN, Wan Khairina |
author_sort |
Ngow, Harris Abdullah |
title |
End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? |
title_short |
End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? |
title_full |
End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? |
title_fullStr |
End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? |
title_full_unstemmed |
End of Life Decision: We are not Playing God? |
title_sort |
end of life decision: we are not playing god? |
publisher |
The Faculty of Medicine, International Islamic University Malaysia |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://irep.iium.edu.my/34856/ http://irep.iium.edu.my/34856/1/End_of_Life_Decision.pdf |
first_indexed |
2023-09-18T20:50:08Z |
last_indexed |
2023-09-18T20:50:08Z |
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1777409938568511488 |