Learning to switch gears — Steering palliative care into emergency medicine
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Indian Journal of Medical Ethics
Abstract
Emergency care is largely seen as synonymous with resuscitation and saving lives. In most of the developing world where Emergency Medicine (EM) is still evolving, the concept of EM palliative care is alien. Provision of palliative care in such settings poses its own challenges in terms of knowledge gaps, sociocultural barriers, dismal doctortopatient ratio with limited time for communication with patients, and lack of established pathways to provide EM palliative care. Integrating the concept of palliative medicine is crucial for expanding the dimension of holistic, valuebased, quality emergency care. However, glitches in decisionmaking processes, especially in high patient volume settings, may lead to inequalities in care provision, based on sociofinancial disparities of patients or premature termination of challenging resuscitations. Pertinent, robust, validated screening tools and guides may assist physicians in tackling this ethical dilemma.
First Page
220
Last Page
223
DOI
10.20529/IJME.2023.007
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Recommended Citation
Bhat, Rachana; Ramaswami, Akshaya; and Aggarwal, Praveen, "Learning to switch gears — Steering palliative care into emergency medicine" (2023). Open Access archive. 8786.
https://impressions.manipal.edu/open-access-archive/8786