Intractable end-of-life suffering and the ethics of palliative sedation

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Abstract

Palliative sedation (sedation to unconsciousness) as an option of last resort for intractable end-of-life distress has been the subject of ongoing discussion and debate as well as policy formulation. A particularly contentious issue has been whether some dying patients experience a form of intractable suffering not marked by physical symptoms that can reasonably be characterized as " existential" in nature and therefore not an acceptable indication for palliative sedation. Such is the position recently taken by the American Medical Association. In this essay we argue that such a stance reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of human suffering, particularly at the end of life, and may deprive some dying patients of an effective means of relieving their intractable terminal distress. © 2010 American Academy of Pain Medicine.

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Cassell, E. J., & Rich, B. A. (2010). Intractable end-of-life suffering and the ethics of palliative sedation. Pain Medicine, 11(3), 435–438. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1526-4637.2009.00786.x

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