Isabelle
Verified registered nurse
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I think it would just be in 7180 where it states that a person who has undergone brain death is dead.
Thanks. I didn't click on that particular link.
I think it would just be in 7180 where it states that a person who has undergone brain death is dead.
A bleeding time is considered an innacurate and obsolete test that is no longer offered in most hospitals.
I can understand this point of view and respect you for it. If indeed someone shouted that the child was "dead dead dead," it's unfortunate and a terrible way to phrase things, but on the other hand, we have to remember that with the doctors and with the family, neither side should be demonized. We have to assume that doctors at a children's hospital are in the profession because they want to help kids. I can certainly understand being frustrated and overwhelmed. Think of the guilt they may be feeling and the sadness of this situation. It shouldn't have happened, they shouldn't have said it, but everyone in this situation is human, including the doctors who may or may not have made mistakes, but either way, still had a child die under their care and undoubtedly feel the effects of that.
Also, under the law Jahi is a body now, as she is deceased. This is all speculation and my opinion, but I have family in the medical profession and professional ties to law enforcement. It's quite common to try to separate the dead from the living to cope when you see death on a regular basis. Should they do it in front of the family? Probably not. But I sincerely doubt that the medical staff is trying to be callous, disrespectful, hard-hearted, or any of the above. That's JMO on the matter, but they work at a children's hospital and have also been put through quite a difficult situation here. Not as much as the parents, of course, and I would never try to belittle the family's grief, but just trying to remember that everyone involved is a human with complicated emotions in a tragic case.
7180 gives many good definitions/descriptions. Is there a section that defines "deceased person"? Thanks
A bleeding time is considered an innacurate and obsolete test that is no longer offered in most hospitals.
It's just seems so wrong that if they were here, in New Jersey, her daughter would be alive and her mother wouldn't have this problem. She'd have what she's asking for...
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What portion of the public are you referring to? I am well-educated and usually supportive of science rather than emotion, but I find myself on the side of Jahi's mother. And I'm not overly religious, either. I am a mother, though, so perhaps that would be the common denominator?
A PT/INR is done, but I don't think this is the case with pre op labs, unless that person was on anticoagulants or a medical condition was disclosed. Pre op usually only includes CBC, Chemistries.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/02/opini...n=Feed:+rss/cnn_topstories+(RSS:+Top+Stories)
A significant minority in the medical profession continue to believe people with dead brains and beating hearts are still alive. Believers include some of our wisest minds -- a Harvard professor, an National Institute of Health theorist, a chief of neurology at UCLA, and the former chair of the U.S. President's Council all reject brain-based death pronouncement. They agree with Jahi's parents that death is linked to circulatory loss.
I agree. Any and all staff referring to Jahi as "the body" should be reported to their respective licensing boards. This is never acceptable behavior. When preparing a deceased patient for transport to the morgue, we have always referred to them by their name and Mr. or Ms. or Mrs and a child by the child's given name.
I am just not sure Jahi can be considered a corpse. Definitions of the word corpse indicate one with complete cessation of all bodily functions, including heartbeat. I don't know that I have ever heard of a ventilated corpse either.
Note that this doctor's personal views are that death occurs even when there exists some lower brain functioning. So he's no extremist.Let parents decide if teen is dead
Editor's note: Robert M. Veatch is professor of medical ethics and the former director of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University. He is also a professor in the Philosophy Department. He has served as an ethics consultant and expert witness in over 30 legal cases including that of Karen Quinlan (1975-76) and that of Baby K (1992), the child with anencephaly whose mother won the right of access to life support for her.
A significant minority in the medical profession continue to believe people with dead brains and beating hearts are still alive. Believers include some of our wisest minds -- a Harvard professor, an National Institute of Health theorist, a chief of neurology at UCLA, and the former chair of the U.S. President's Council all reject brain-based death pronouncement. They agree with Jahi's parents that death is linked to circulatory loss.
Others take a position more liberal than the standard law that defines brain death. They favor pronouncing death in some cases even when some parts of the lower brain are still functioning. I have defended that view since 1973.
Why, then, does American law continue to force one standard of death on Jahi's parents and others who have plausible alternative definitions? Once one realizes that the choice among the options is not a cut-and-dried matter of medical science, why not let people have some choice based on their personal religious and cultural views? This is a "conscience-based" approach to defining death. We need to have a default public policy -- the brain-based definition currently in law -- but people like Jahi's parents should have the option to record their conscientiously held positions and allow pronouncements of death to be based on those beliefs. That's the law in New Jersey and Japan. That would mean Jahi could be classified as alive if that is what her parents choose.
The trouble arises when physicians want to stop life-support, perhaps because they believe the case is hopeless, and the patient or family insist that life support continue. We call this the "futile care problem." Society should show sympathy for mothers who want their children to be kept alive.http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/02/opinion/veatch-defining-death/index.html?hpt=hp_t4
Listening to some of the videos of reporters doing press about Jahi, I was really appalled that they refer to Jahi's body, not simply Jahi. IIRC, It was the male reporter from KVTU that someone had linked up thread who mentioned it several times in his report.
Thats a huge roadblock for us so were going to try to go around that and go about moving her without it and finding a physician at the nearby facility to that will be willing to perform the procedure.
Link: http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2014/01/02/mcmath-family-says-jahi-moved-soon/
My apologies if this has been posted. Above is a quote just taken from Jahi's uncle.
They intend to move her without the procedures. I am NO med professional, but my husband, a Neurologist, has been trying to figure out why they didn't do this in the first place.
Would love to hear what any of you Med pros think about this.
Thats a huge roadblock for us so were going to try to go around that and go about moving her without it and finding a physician at the nearby facility to that will be willing to perform the procedure.
Link: http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2014/01/02/mcmath-family-says-jahi-moved-soon/
My apologies if this has been posted. Above is a quote just taken from Jahi's uncle.
They intend to move her without the procedures. I am NO med professional, but my husband, a Neurologist, has been trying to figure out why they didn't do this in the first place.
Would love to hear what any of you Med pros think about this.
NOT a medical professional!!! My initial understanding was that no facility would take her without having those procedures done. The new one might be willing to. But would they then just move her with CHO's ventilator still in place? I'm totally clueless about these things.