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End-ot-lite decisions in Dutch medical practice
In the end, death comes to us all. This reality has not changed during
centuries of attempting to unravel the mysteries of life and death. Even today,
death is the most unescapable event in each human life. Life and time before
death, however, have altered considerably. At least two changes are
responsible for this.
The first is that, over the past hundred and fifty years, man has succeeded
in changing his condition in such a way that, in the well developed countries,
average life expectancy has doubled. The strongly reduced perinatal and
infant mortality have caused death to disappear almost completely from daily
life in the Netherlands.
A second Important development is of much more recent date, basically
dating only from after World War Ii: the development of modern medicine.
Medical practice today is increasingly able to assist in curing the sick, in
making life bearable for the sick and extending life for a shorter or longer
period of time. In other words: death still comes to everyone, but the time at
which this happens isoften partly determined by decisions whether to stop
or to continue treatment.
Obviously, this does not hold for all deaths. People still die from accidents
or from acute fatal diseases such as acute myocardial infarction. In all
non-sudden deaths, however, patient and physician are involved in a shorter
or longer disease process. A considerable difference compared with the
situation existing over one hundred years ago, when In some municipalities
more than half of all deceased had no physician's assistance during their
preceding disease. Now that medicine can offer so much in terms of
prolonging life and relieving suffering, the physician's task at the end of life
is expanding. In the past, this task primarily Involved the provision of terminal
care. Increasingly, decision-making by the physician is among the medical
responsibilities at the end of life