Drugs, delirium, and ethics at the end of life Journal Article


Authors: Thomas, C.; Alici, Y.; Breitbart, W.; Bruera, E.; Blackler, L.; Sulmasy, D. P.
Article Title: Drugs, delirium, and ethics at the end of life
Abstract: For older persons with delirium at the end of life, treatment involves complex trade-offs and highly value-sensitive decisions. The principles of beneficence, nonmaleficence, respect for autonomy, and justice establish important parameters but lack the structure necessary to guide clinicians in the optimal management of these patients. We propose a set of ethical rules to guide therapeutics—the canons of therapy—as a toolset to help clinicians deliberate about the competing concerns involved in the management of older patients with delirium at the end of life. These canons are standards of judgment that reflect how many experienced clinicians already intuitively practice, but which are helpful to articulate and apply as basic building blocks for a relatively neglected but emerging ethics of therapy. The canons of therapy most pertinent to the care of patients with delirium at the end of life are as follows: (1) restoration, which counsels that the goal of all treatment is to restore the patient, as much as possible, to homeostatic equilibrium; (2) means-end proportionality, which holds that every treatment should be well-fitted to the intended goal or end; (3) discretion, which counsels that an awareness of the limits of medical knowledge and practice should guide all treatment decisions; and (4) parsimony, which maintains that only as much therapeutic force as is necessary should be used to achieve the therapeutic goal. Carefully weighed and applied, these canons of therapy may provide the ethical structure needed to help clinicians optimally navigate complex cases. © 2024 The American Geriatrics Society.
Keywords: aged; palliative care; delirium; terminal care; end-of-life care; homeostasis; ethics; therapeutics; restoration; humans; human; article; parsimony; discretion; means end proportionality; psychological and psychiatric procedures
Journal Title: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
Volume: 72
Issue: 7
ISSN: 0002-8614
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2024-07-01
Start Page: 1964
End Page: 1972
Language: English
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.18766
PUBMED: 38240387
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11226357
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Yesne Alici
    94 Alici
  2. William S Breitbart
    506 Breitbart
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