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15 - Community futility policies: the illusion of consensus?
- Edited by Marjorie B. Zucker, Choice In Dying, New York, Howard D. Zucker, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York
- Foreword by Alexander Morgan Capron, University of Southern California
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- Book:
- Medical Futility
- Published online:
- 11 September 2009
- Print publication:
- 13 March 1997, pp 168-178
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- Chapter
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Summary
The longer the problem of medical futility persists, the smaller will be the percentage of difficult futility cases that are resolved entirely between physicians and patients or their surrogates. Like many medical ethics problems, futility has become a matter of institutional, legislative, judicial, and scholarly concern. This is not unusual. What is unusual is the degree to which the issue of futility has been identified as a matter of community concern. For example, a brochure advertising a recent conference titled “A Community Policy on Medical Futility?” included the statement, “We believe that implementation of a consensus community standard embracing the full spectrum of public and professional opinion is the only way to ensure rational and ethical guidelines for medical practice” (Duke University 1995). Efforts across the country to develop community futility policies are underway in Colorado, California, Texas, and elsewhere (see Chapter 14).
For example, a citywide task force on medical futility has been established in Houston. Professionals from nine health care organizations are participating. After a basic philosophy was agreed on, a committee began to develop guidelines to help member institutions develop institutional futility policies and to draft and obtain support for legislation consistent with those guidelines. The committee produced four principles and nine procedural steps, which have been summarized by Pentz (Pentz 1995)
GUIDe (now called The Colorado Collective for Medical Decisions) is a group of Denver health care providers that began organizing in 1993 to create community clinical standards for withholding futile treatment.