tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-877839874122771026.post7932777689836605205..comments2023-10-08T16:23:29.150+01:00Comments on Hippocrates Got Lost: The Bell TollsAsclepiushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09374111673604085654noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-877839874122771026.post-36225675954929223892010-01-19T19:28:17.271+00:002010-01-19T19:28:17.271+00:00Thats a really good point Vincent. Having read tha...Thats a really good point Vincent. Having read that I cant understand how that point of view didnt occur to me. <br /><br />Thank YouAsclepiushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09374111673604085654noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-877839874122771026.post-69551302614918673482010-01-19T08:02:42.169+00:002010-01-19T08:02:42.169+00:00I agree with your viewpoint, but when I told my wi...I agree with your viewpoint, but when I told my wife about your post, she saw a different angle. She has no clinical duties in her hospital. Within Infection Control she performs myriad secretarial functions including recording the daily progress of patients with MRSA, C. difficile and so on in a database. She remarked on the professionalism of nurses who may see that patients have not long to live but carry on regardless, on the grounds that they must not give up on them; for hope is therapeutic. She thought that discontinuing routine tests on a lucid patient could convey the impression that the routine efforts of daily care were no longer worth it.<br /><br />She felt that the signalling of impending death, whether initiated by the patient, nurse or doctor, would be a call for relatives (and priest, in the case of Catholics) to attend the bedside, rather than the cessation of clinical observations (unless they were highly invasive).<br /><br />However, the above is merely a set of generalisations from another observer.<br /><br />To me, what counts is no so much the nature of the rules, or when they may be broken with impunity; but the individual care and sensitivity of the nursing care, so clearly demonstrated in your story.Vincenthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18297306807695767580noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-877839874122771026.post-87210859293283931262010-01-18T19:17:50.189+00:002010-01-18T19:17:50.189+00:00This kind of situation doesnt come terribly natura...This kind of situation doesnt come terribly naturally to me, I know its best to do nothing, but I'm wired for A&E, we dont get palliative patients there, I am used to fighting for a patients life with every scrap of knowledge, every trick, every ounce of my training. I accept in situations such as this that I shouldnt do those things it still doesnt seem to feel right somehow. My fiancé is a truely gifted nurse who has the psychological and mental fortitude to deal with palliative care on a very regular basis. I think this shows the wide variety in nursing and its good that it attracts such a wide variety of people.Asclepiushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09374111673604085654noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-877839874122771026.post-90545076745027729462010-01-18T13:01:26.371+00:002010-01-18T13:01:26.371+00:00I think you guys do such a good job, I hope I come...I think you guys do such a good job, I hope I come across someone like you who care, when my time comes xxSagehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01005047450040559399noreply@blogger.com