Clinical ethic consultations in longterm care in Upper Austria—5 years report of the Landesverband Hospiz Upper Austria

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Abstract

Despite the unique nature of ethical issues in a longterm care setting, there is limited help in decision making for nursing home personnel. 2015 the Hospizverband of Upper Austria established a clinical ethic committee to help providing a good quality of decision making in nursing home. A consultation could be asked by the managing nurses of the longterm care institution, by the resident or by relatives of the nursing home residents. Since the start of the ethic committee 24 from 137 nursing homes in Upper Austria asked for a consultation. All consultations came from the personnel of the nursing homes. Beside the nursing team and 1–3 members of the ethic committee, in 75% of the consultations the physician was present. The most often discussed ethical issues were hospital admission (25%), conflicts with relatives of the residents, artificial nutrition (including PEG tube insertion and displacement) and use of restraints. The most underlying illness was dementia (50%). 20% of the residents were competent in their wishes, but none of the involved residents had a written precisely patient decree.

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APA

Lenz, K., Mittendorfer, H., Sterrer, H., Brunschütz, D., Glanzer, A., Feregyhazy-Astecker, D., … Sterrer, H. (2022). Clinical ethic consultations in longterm care in Upper Austria—5 years report of the Landesverband Hospiz Upper Austria. Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift, 172(7–8), 151–156. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10354-020-00801-x

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