In the Midst of Life
patients.
By having the information recorded in the Ambulance Control Centres, the crew would be forewarned.
Having access to a written DNAR/Advance Directive/ Living Will immediately on arrival will prevent inappropriate clinical intervention being performed.
Paramedic practitioners and clinical care paramedics have a huge range of medical treatments available. These can include broad-spectrum antibiotics and many drugs for treating minor illnesses, the use of which is controlled by Patient Group Directives (PGDs). All ambulances carry oxygen.
Louise ended her lecture by saying that the ambulance crew is usually first on the scene of a collapse, and that there is still a widespread lack of understanding among the general public about the scope and practice of ambulance clinicians in end-of-lifesituations. She pointed out that the advanced medical pathways available often put ambulance clinicians in a difficult position, which can be a true moral dilemma for them.
Numerous letters and telephone calls between Louise and myself have impressed on me the truth of these last words. She has told me many sad stories of an old person, obviously at the point of death, or maybe even dead, whom they are obliged to resuscitate and transfer as fast as possible to the nearest A&E department, where more advanced techniques can be administered. She tells me that usually the relatives or friends will say, ‘Do all you can,’ and insist on transfer to the hospital; and although the crew know that such steps are often pointless and sometimes cruel, they
must
do it.
On the other hand, she told me of a man of forty whom she recently attended after he had suffered a cardiac arrest: the ambulance crew resuscitated him, and took him to hospital. He returned home within four days, and was back at work in a fortnight.
There really is no right or wrong here.
I asked Louise Massen to write a supplement on the training of ambulance crews and the scope of their work, which is reproduced as Appendix II, at the end of this book.
Currently, there is a great deal of anxiety and inter-disciplinary debate about whether or not resuscitation is appropriate in palliative care – this being defined as ‘the care of patients with a known terminal disease’. Opinions rage back and forth with extreme views expressed on both sides. A Joint Statement from the British Medical Association, the Resuscitation Council (UK) and the Royal College of Nursing was issued in 2006. It is broadly based and helpful, but very technical. More succinct, and therefore more accessible, is an article published in the
Nursing Times
in April 2009 by Madeline Bass, Senior Nurse and Head of Education at St Nicholas Hospice, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk. The article shows the insights and instincts that a thoughtful nurse can gain from manyyears’ experience of caring for patients at the end of their lives. This article is reproduced as Appendix III at the end of this book.
Resuscitation in nursing care homes is quite another matter. The people in them generally do not have what is termed ‘known terminal illness’. They are old and frail, but with the advent of the National Service Framework for Older People (DOH 2001), age discrimination is illegal. They may have a condition such as Alzheimer’s or a neuro-muscular disease, but these are chronic, and a known terminal time span cannot even loosely be ascribed. Some people in nursing care homes have a DNAR order, issued by a doctor. Some people sign living wills that include a DNAR order. For the majority of people, however, no advance decision has been made, in which case whether or not to resuscitate is entirely up to the staff of the care home, and whoever happens to be on duty at the time. There are very few trained, registered and experienced nurses working in nursing care homes these days. These homes are run by managers, who may have no clinical experience, and care assistants, who may have a very skimpy training in basic nursing. But they all know how to use an AED machine.
I have a friend, Sue Theobald, who does a great deal of voluntary work for the elderly and disabled, including running a music therapy group. She tells me that the group was in a small, specialist home that houses about six people with severe advanced Alzheimer’s disease. Whilst the group was there, a woman actually died. Within seconds, the staff had her wired up to an AED machine. Sue tells me the speed of their movements was incredible.
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher