In the Midst of Life

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In the Midst of Life Page 43

by Jennifer Worth


  livor mortis, 253

  London Hospital, 239

  love, 106—10, 125

  lumbar punctures, 171, 182

  lungs, 217, 236

  embolism, 290—1, 302, 306

  terminal failure, 3 46

  Macmillan Nurses, 66, 162, 279, 284

  Majdanek death camp, 53

  Manhattan State Hospital, 54

  manual cardiac defibrillation, 357

  Marie Curie Hospital, 81—144

  Massen, Louise, 254—7, 357—67

  mastectomy, 82, 318

  matrons, 24, 203

  medical students, 54

  memory loss, 287

  Mental Capacity Act, 243, 354, 372

  mersaryl, 217

  Merton, Mrs, 102—5, 107—10

  Methodist Homes for the Aged, 197—8

  Mohammed, Prophet, 326

  monastic offices, 163

  morticians, 156, 160

  Moslems, 112—14, 332

  motor neurone disease, 278

  Mount St Helens, 260—9

  mouth care, 99, 382

  Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 277

  MRSA, 291, 307—8

  multiple sclerosis, 278

  music therapy, 258

  myocardial infarction, 272, 358

  naso-gastric tubes, 199—200, 281—2, 381

  naso-jejunostomy, 381

  National Council for Palliative

  Care (NCPC), 254, 365, 374

  National End of Life Care

  Programme, 161

  National Health Service, 30—31, 75, 293, 301

  Gold Standard Framework, 161, 342, 371—3, 376

  and hospice movement, 65—6

  National Health Service

  Training Directorate

  (NHSTD), 357

  National Service Framework for Older People, 258

  National Vocational

  Qualifications (NVQs), 207—8, 210,212—13

  near-death experiences, 106—7, 270

  neuro-muscular disease, 258, 278

  New York Times, 166

  Nightingale, Florence, 203

  Nuland, SherwinB, 196—7, 235, 241

  nuns, 243—4, 308, 324

  nurses

  agency, 293

  and hierarchy, 23—4

  and incurable conditions, 136—7

  and laying-out, 160

  presence at death, 83—4

  training reforms, 203—5, 211

  nurses homes, 30

  nursing auxiliaries, 137, 205—6

  Nursing Times, 66, 238, 257

  oedema, 230—1, 235, 382

  oestrogen, 90

  old age, 45—9, 329

  active, 46, 48

  as cause of death, 5, 7, 45

  and resuscitation, 252, 258, 352—3

  old man’s friend, 196, 308

  On Death and Dying, 51, 59—60, 67

  oncotic pressure, 382

  Ontario, 343

  opoid metabolites, 383

  Oral Feeding Difficulties and Dilemmas, 199—200

  oro-pharyngeal airway, 339

  Orthodox Church, 97, 157

  osteoporosis, 320

  oxygen, 217

  palliative care (specialism), 66, 368—395

  pancreas, 217, 229

  paraldehyde, 23—4, 28

  paralysis, 195

  creeping, 200—1, 279

  psychosomatic, 54

  paramedics, 246, 248—9, 252, 256, 357—67, 370

  training and education, 357—9

  Parkinson’s disease, 278, 366

  pelvic fractures, 41—2, 104—5, 307

  phlebitis, 151

  physiotherapy, 178, 188, 190, 231, 293

  pneumonia, 196, 229, 308, 353

  poisoning, 338, 354

  Poland, 51—3

  police, 249

  population, ageing, 194

  post-cardiac arrest syndrome, 344

  post-mortems, 249

  post-resuscitation disease, 369

  potassium citrate, 90, 94

  powers of attorney, 352, 354

  primary progressive aphasia, 278

  private hospitals and clinics, 206, 208, 210, 212

  progesterone, 90

  Project 2000, 204—5

  prostatectomy, 90—1

  public access defibrillation, 338

  public expectations, 242, 371

  pulmonary oedema, 382

  pupillary light response, 345

  Queen Alexandra Royal Army

  Nursing Corps, 239

  Quinlan, Karen Ann, 345—6

  radiotherapy, 81—2, 84, 90—1, in, 120, 143—4

  as evidence of cancer, 130—1, 133—5, 139—41

  as placebo, 124—5

  Ratski, Mrs, 9—42

  Reading, 10, 118, 136, 209

  Recognition of Life Extinct

  (ROLE), 256, 363

  refugees, 51—2

  resuscitation, 197, 211, 218—19, 222—59, 275—6, 330—1, 337—56

  ABC guidelines, 255, 338—9

  and advanced directives, 354—6, 365—6

  and age discrimination, 252, 258, 353

  and Allow a Natural Death

  (AND) procedure, 348—9

  and ambulance services, 253—7, 359—61, 365—7

  cessation of, 343—4, 353—4

  and choice, 368—76

  developments in, 237—8, 337—40, 356

  and DNAR orders, 242—3, 251, 253—6, 258, 346—8, 356, 360—1, 365—7, 372, 374,376

  and electric shocks, 238—9, 241

  and medical history, 353—4

  and mental capacity, 243, 351—2, 354, 360, 360, 357

  mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, 237, 240, 330,338

  open heart resuscitation, 222—5, 230, 238, 338

  and palliative care, 255, 257, 361

  and Recognition of Life Extinct (ROLE), 256, 363

  and relatives, 354—5, 370

  and ‘right to die’ case, 345—6

  success rates, 341—5, 356, 369—70

  Resuscitation Council (UK), 257, 338—9, 341, 344, 355

  rheumatoid arthritis, 309

  Right to Die, The, 117

  Right to Die case, 345—6

  rigor mortis, 255

  Roberts, Elias, 90—100

  Rosen, Shirley, 269

  Royal Berkshire Hospital, 11, 64, 240

  Royal College of Nursing

  (RCN), 204—6, 210, 238, 243, 257

  Royal College of Physicians, 199—200

  Royal Free Hospital, 81, 90, III, 129

  St Christopher’s Hospice, 65—7

  St John’s Ambulance, 251

  St Joseph’s Hospice, 62—3

  St Nicholas Hospice, 257

  St Paul, 106

  St Thomas’s Hospital, 62—3

  Salmon Report, 203

  Saunders, Dame Cicely, 62—7,

  Second World War, 22, 51—2, 228, 280, 316,337

  self-preservation, 286

  septicaemia, 42, 196

  Shipman, Dr Harold, 310

  shock, 20

  anaphylactic, 344, 354

  surgical, 91

  shoulders, broken, 319

  Silvester, Dr, 237

  Socrates, 326

  speech, and human communication, 279

  speech therapy, 189

  starvation, 196, 281

  stroke, 46, 48, 170—1, 189, 359, 366

  and rehabilitation, 180, 188—9

  stroke patients, 165—91

  suffering, 308—9

  suicide, 140—1, 313—15, 327

  Switzerland, 51—5, 319, 323—5

  syphilis, 52

  syringe driver, 383

  television, 146—8, 251, 342, 369

  Termination of Resuscitation Study, 343

  Thames, river, 30, 69, 168

  Theobald, Sue, 258

  Third Spacing, 382

  Thomas, Dylan, 313

  throat ulcer
ation, 19, 21

  thrombolytic therapy, 358—9

  thrombosis, 170

  thrush, 385

  total parenteral nutrition, 381

  tracheotomy, 15

  transient ischaemic attacks (TIA), 170

  trephining, 171, 188

  Truman, Harry Randolph, 260—9

  UK Central Council for Nurses (UKCC), 204—5

  ultrasound, 188

  unconsciousness, 220

  undertakers, 249

  University of Colorado Hospital, 55, 58

  University of Washington, 264

  uraemia, 91, 229

  urinary infections, 21

  uterine prolapse, 82

  varicose veins, 111

  vegetative states, 196, 338—1

  ventricular fibrillation, 197, 223, 235, 237, 252, 337—8, 340—1, 359—60, 370

  ventricular tachycardia, 340—1, 370

  Voluntary Aid Detachments (VADs), 205

  volvulus, 15, 20

  Warfarin, 170, 299—300

  Waters, Mr, 85—9

  Whiting, Philip, 196—7

  Whitman, Walt, 233

  widows, 159, 161

  Wieter, Helga, 316—28

  Winterton, Mr, 96—7

  Women’s Institute, 167—8

  World Health Organization, 45

  Worth, Philip, 44

  Yale University Hospital, 235

  Zürich, 52—3, 70, 75, 324—5

  Copyright

  A PHOENIX EBOOK

  First published in Great Britain in 2010 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson.

  First published in ebook in 2010 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson.

  This updated ebook published in 2011 by Phoenix.

  Copyright © 2010 Jennifer Worth

  The right of Jennifer Worth to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

  This is a work of non-fiction, and the events it recounts are true. However, the names and certain identifying characteristics of some of the people who appear in its pages have been changed. The views expressed in this book are the author’s.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  ISBN: 9780297859598

  Orion Books

  The Orion Publishing Group Ltd

  Orion House

  5 Upper St Martin’s Lane

  LondonWC2H 9EA

  An Hachette UK Company

  www.orionbooks.co.uk

  * from How We Die, Sherwin B Nuland, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1993

  * It is very difficult to remove a feed-peg because it is a life-maintaining device. It requires a major medical/legal decision and this is not easy to come by.

  ** Ahronheim, J C, Morrison, R S, Baskin, S A, Morris, J, Meier, D E. Treatment of the dying in the acute care hospital. Advanced dementia and metastatic cancer. Archives of Internal Medicine, 1996; 156: 2094-100.

  * A joule is a unit of heat, energy and force – in this case electricity.

  * For an update, see Appendix I, Medical Aspects of Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation, by David Hackett, MD, FRCP, FESC.

  * From Shirley Rosen,‘ Truman of St Helens’, published by Madrona Publishers, Seattle, Washington State, 1981

  * Dylan Thomas, 1951.

  * The Resuscitation Council. http://www.resus.org.uk/SiteIndx.htm

  * The Resuscitation Council. http://www.resus.org.uk/pages/mediMain.htm

  * Gwinnutt C, Columb M, Harris R. Outcome after cardiac arrest in adults in UK hospitals: effect of the 1997 guidelines. Resuscitation 2000; 47: 125-135. http://www.resuscitationjournal.com/article/S0300-9572(00)00212-4/abstract f National Cardiac Arrest Audit (NCAA). https://www.icnarc.org/

  * Diem SJ, Lantos JD, TulskyJA. Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation on Television - Miracles and Misinformation. New Engl J Med 1996; 334: 1578-152. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/334/24/1578

  † Stiell IG, Wells GA, Field B et al, for the Ontario Prehospital Advanced Life Support Study Group. Advanced Cardiac Life Support in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. New EnglJ Med 2004; 3 51:647-656.http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/351/7/647 £ HerlitzJ, Bang A, GunnarssonJ, EngdahlJ, Karlson BW, LindqvistJ, Waagstein L. Factors associated with survival to hospital discharge among patients hospitalised alive after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: change in outcome over 20 years in the community of Goteborg, Sweden. Heart 2003; 89: 25-30. http://heart.bmj.com/content/89/1/25.abstract

  * Sasson C, Rogers MAM, Dahl J, Kellermann AL. Predictors of Survival From Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. 2010; 3: 63-81. http://circoutcomes.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/short/3/1/63

  † The Public Access Defibrillation Trial Investigators. Public-Access Defibrillation and Survival after Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. New Engl J Med 2004; 351: 637- 646. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/351/7/637

  * Morrison LJ, Visentin LM, Kiss A, Theriault R, Eby D, Vermeulen M, Sherbino J, Verbeek PR, for the TOR Investigators. Validation of a Rule for Termination of Resuscitation in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. New Engl J Med 2006; 355: 478- 487. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/355/5/478

  * Neumar RW, Nolan J P, Adrie C et al. Post-Cardiac Arrest Syndrome. Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, Treatment, and Prognostication. A Consensus Statement From the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation. Circulation 2008; 118: 2452-2483. http://circ.ahajournals.org/

  † Fischer M, Fischera NJ, Schuttlerb J. One-year survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Bonn city: outcome report according to the ‘Utstein style’. Resuscitation 1997; 33: 233-243. http://www.resuscitationjournal.com/ X http://www.karenannquinlan.org/

  * The Resuscitation Council. http://www.resus.org.uk/pages/DNARrstd.htm

  † Allowing a Natural Death: http://allowingnaturaldeath.org/

  † The NHS National Gold Standards Framework Centre. http://www.goldstandards framework.nhs.uk/

  * The NHS Gold Standards Framework. http://www.goldstandardsframework. nhs.uk/

  † Avon, Somerset and Wiltshire Cancer Services Allow a Natural Death (do not attempt resuscitation) Order. http://www.aswcs.nhs.uk/

 

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