Metadata
Title
Life and Medical Ethics in Pediatric Neurosurgery
Authors
Yamasaki M
Year
2016
Publication
Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica
Abstract
Ethical issues in the field of pediatric neurosurgery, including prenatal diagnosis, palliative care for children with an intractable serious disease, and medical neglect, are discussed. An important role of medicine is to offer every possible treatment to a patient. However, it also is the responsibility of medicine to be conscious of its limitations, and to help parents love and respect a child who suffers from an incurable disease. When dealing with cases of medical neglect and palliative care for an incurable disease, it is critical to diagnose the child’s condition accurately and evaluate the outcome. However, to treat or not to treat also depends on the medical resources and social-economic status of the community, the parents’ religion and philosophy, the policies of the institutions involved, and the limits of medical science. Moral dilemmas will continue to be addressed as medical progress yields treatments for untreatable diseases in the future.
Authors
MeSH
Adult | Anxiety/px [Psychology] | Cancer Pain/px [Psychology] | Caregivers/px [Psychology] | Child | Cost of Illness | Cross-Sectional Studies | Depression/et [Etiology] | Fatigue/px [Psychology] | Female | Health Services Accessibility | Humans | Male | Nausea/px [Psychology] | Neoplasms/px [Psychology] | Neoplasms/th [Therapy] | Palliative Care/px [Psychology] | Surveys and Questionnaires