Bioethics In Palliative Care

 Bio-ethics, also referred to as medical ethics, is that the study and employment of ethical values in life science. This includes clinical care and clinical research. Individuals working within the field of drugs are faced daily with moral dilemmas and difficult decision-making like: when life begins and when life ends the withholding or withdrawal of treatment the allocation of scarce medical resources the accessibility of resources. Ethical issues near the top of life (EOL) often arise due to concerns about what proportion and what quite care add up for somebody with a limited life expectancy, particularly if the patient is very old. There is often conflict between physicians or nurses and relations about what constitutes appropriate care. Many of those conflicts are often avoided by clarifying who makes the difficult decisions to limit care and by advance care planning. Physicians have recognized the proper of the patient to participate in medical deciding for the last 25 years. The principle of autonomy, or the right to make choices about one's own life, has now become the centrepiece of modern American biomedical ethics. The available data suggest that patients with terminal cancer are more likely to receive end of life care that is consistent with their preferences when they have had the opportunity to discuss their wishes with their physician.  

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