Advanced life support Essays

  • Critical Analysis of an Incident

    2282 Words  | 5 Pages

    Introduction The intention of this written essay is to demonstrate an understanding of my views on the art and science of reflection and the issues surrounding reflective practice. It is based on a significant incident from my own area of clinical practice as a state registered paramedic within the U.K. There is a discussion appraising the concept of reflection both generally, and in my particular area of practice. This is followed by an analysis of the incident using The What ? Model

  • Electronic Medical Files: A Threat to Privacy?

    1872 Words  | 4 Pages

    pumped into them by the system of machines we call life support.  Take a moment to think about the roles that computers play in this scenario.  Now imagine the scene and the patient's condition without computers.  That's easy.  There is nothing: no slow breathing, no whirring of machines, no dripping IV, no beeping heart monitor. Not only would the person probably be dead, but everything from the reclining bed to the nurse call button to the life support system relies on computers. Computers have

  • Ethics of In Vitro Fertilization

    2462 Words  | 5 Pages

    In Vitro Fertilization “The unexamined life is not worth living.” With these words, Socrates stated the creed of reflective men and women and set the task for ethics: to seek, with the help of reason, a consistent and defensible approach to life and its moral dilemmas (Walters 22). Ethical inquiry is important to us when we are unsure of the direction in which we are heading. “New philosophy calls all in doubt,” wrote John Donne in the wake of the Copernican Revolution and of Charles I’s violent

  • Use of Regitine During Transplants

    1591 Words  | 4 Pages

    died waiting.8 Against this backdrop of critical need, physicians in Wisconsin are using a controversial drug, Regitine, to preserve organs from patients on life support who still have brain activity, but who are not expected to survive their injury or illness.4 These donors, who typically die of cardiac arrest following the removal of life-sustaining technologies, are called non-heart-beating donors (NHBDs) and differ from traditional "brain-dead" donors in that the cessation of heart beat is

  • Euthanasia

    1181 Words  | 3 Pages

    patient has the legal right to ask their doctor to help them die when the end of life is near and the suffering is severe. I believe that if a person is terminally ill, and is in immense amounts of pain, that it is their legal right, to end their life prematurely, with their doctor’s assistance. I.     The different types of euthanasia A.     Passive euthanasia: acceleration of death by the removal of life support B.     Active euthanasia: a doctor directly assists in the death of a person C.     Physician

  • Human Beings Have a Right to Die

    3634 Words  | 8 Pages

    your shoes. At this point, with all your abilities either gone or dwindling, you will have lost your independence and be forced to rely completely on others to live your life. Imagine, again, suffering a traumatic accident that has rendered you paralyzed from the chin down and dependent on a respirator to breathe for you. Suddenly, life as you knew it is gone. You can not do anything for yourself, not even so much as breathe for yourself and keep yourself alive. Any and all of your daily maintenance

  • Athletic Training Education Program

    966 Words  | 2 Pages

    Education Program is how to provide immediate emergency care. That includes everything from background information to actually being able to save an athlete’s or any one else’s life. You must be aware of legal considerations, how and when to approach a victim, the human body systems, examining the victim, basic life support, bleeding and shock, identifying wounds, sudden illnesses, injuries, and how to care for them; also you must be aware of cold and heat related injuries, and how to rescue and move

  • Euthanasia Essay: Mercy Killing or Murder?

    1344 Words  | 3 Pages

    Euthanasia: Mercy Killing or Murder? We, as humans, are mortal beings.  Our life span is finite.  Even though we are mortal, we try to hang onto our lives as long as we can; fear of death and wanting to live forever are, after all, part of human nature.  Sometimes, however, the field of medicine capitalizes on this aspect of humanity. While it is certainly true that one goal of medicine has always been to prolong life, another goal has been the alleviation of pain and suffering.  One point at which

  • Preparing For Our Deaths

    904 Words  | 2 Pages

    earth” (Cloud,2000,p.60). We should prepare for our deaths to show our wishes concerning treatment and life support as well as other aspects. We should make choices while we are still well, so that we are treated properly before we die. Frank Ostaceski said “we have more preparation for how to operate our VCRs than we do for how we die”(Cloud,2000,p.60). In today’s society we all try to prolong life as long as possible. Technology is finding new ways that we can stay healthier and lead productive lives

  • Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide are Murder

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    meaning "easy death," and is now often associated with the infamous Dr. Kevorkian. There are three types of euthanasia - what doctors consider to be "letting the patient die," for instance taking both conscious and unconscious patients off of life support, not reviving the patient in case of a heart failure, et cetera. There is also assisted suicide. Dr. Kevorkian and his suicide machine have made themselves known through this technique. The machine injects a lethal dosage into the "patients"

  • Euthanasia: Everyone Has the Right to Die

    1489 Words  | 3 Pages

    incurable disease; mercy killing (World Book, p. 733). This intentional termination of life by another is at the request of the person who dies, but like so many other religious, social and political terms, euthanasia has many meanings. Passive euthanasia is defined as, the hastening of death of a person by withdrawing some type of support and letting nature take its course, examples of this are, removing life support systems, stopping medical procedures, stopping food and water, not delivering CPR and

  • Euthanasia: An Individual Choice

    1848 Words  | 4 Pages

    grandmother’s or mother’s wishes were. That should have been the end to his grandmother’s suffering, but it was not. In this instance, doctors insisted on keeping his grandmother on life support, despite his mother’s request and his grandmother was incapable of articulating her wishes. She didn’t want her mother on life support. Today in modern “democratic” medicine, physicians are suppose to serve and advise, and only in extreme situations of incapacities, emergencies, lack of available health care proxies

  • Euthanasia - An Immoral Act

    2820 Words  | 6 Pages

    practice when life seems pointless? The choice of whether to live or not live is directly influenced by the decision to indulge in a process characterized as “physician assisted suicide” or simply called Euthanasia. Many people believe it is solely left upon God to determine when death should occur, but some people believe that a doctor has the right to take their life and help the patient destroy it. In this paper I will be discussing what euthanasia is, how it affects the patients life, and the implication

  • Family Members Should NOT Decide When Life Support is Needed

    1624 Words  | 4 Pages

    Should the decision to keep a person on life support be made by family members only? This question has major impact on many people’s lives, their deaths, and their quality of life. Many other questions can be asked in conjunction with this question. How would you like to be kept on life support? Would you want a doctor to make the decision of ‘life or death’? The questions just keep on coming, and every time we seem to find ourselves divided. This issue is relevant because of the recent media

  • My Dad and Old Cars

    1081 Words  | 3 Pages

    eventually puts them on life support. This keeps them viable long beyond the time other family members vote to pull the plug. He drives a 1968 VW van that chugs along on its third rebuilt engine. My big brother vows to bury dad in it. The 1971 VW Bug that he used for fifteen years is still operable, but since a teenager's foot went through the rusted floorboards to the street below, it's been relegated to the retirement home: his driveway. He continues paying on the life insurance policy but he has

  • Earths Ecosystem in Danger

    577 Words  | 2 Pages

    The study, by 1,360 experts in 95 nations, said a rising human population had polluted or over-exploited two thirds of the ecological systems on which life depends, ranging from clean air to fresh water, in the past 50 years. "At the heart of this assessment is a stark warning," said the 45-member board of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. "Human activity is putting such strain on the natural functions of Earth that the ability of the planet's ecosystems to sustain future generations can no

  • Legal Issues Surrounding First Aid

    1666 Words  | 4 Pages

    First aid is the initial care given to a sick or injured person before more formal medical assistance is applied. The goal of first aid is to intervene actively to prevent further damage, to provide life support, and to begin effective treatment of the victim's condition, to minimize injury and prevent death. Although first aid is not a substitute for medical care, those trained in first aid are able to assess the nature and the extent of an emergency and determine the best course of action to take

  • A Reasonable Approach to Euthanasia

    1570 Words  | 4 Pages

    request. Indirect and involuntary euthanasia occurs when a hospital decides that it is time to remove life support (Fletcher 42-3). Euthanasia can be traced as far back as to the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations. It was sometimes allowed in these civilizations to help others die. Voluntary euthanasia was approved in these ancient societies. As time passed, religion increased, and life was viewed to be sacred. Euthanasia in any form was seen as wrong (Encarta 98). In this century

  • Euthanasia and Living Wills

    1123 Words  | 3 Pages

    Living Wills Imagine someone you love...better yet, imagine yourself lying in a hospital bed oblivious to the world around you, unable to move or show any signs of life,  your own existence controlled by an I.V., a respiratory machine, and a feeding tube.  In essence you are dead.  Your body is no longer able to sustain life, its entire purpose is now replaced by a machine - you are being kept alive by artificial means.  At this point the question arises - should you be kept alive by these

  • Should Dying Persons Be Kept On Life Support Machine?

    1136 Words  | 3 Pages

    Kept On Life Support Machine? Keeping a patient on life support is not a bad idea, it only becomes very controversial when the chances of an individual to survive are very rare. The opinions might be divided on the matter, but it is very imperative to note that the act of placing an individual on a life support when their chances of survival are minimum is unacceptable. It is for this very reason that I tend to suggest that there is no tangible point in placing someone who is very ill in a life-supporting