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I've got an interesting ethics case and just wondered what people's take on it was. It's a true story, although I know about the details only 2nd hand:
23 year old drunk driver comes in very bad shape from an MVA. Unconscious, crit is horribly low, and doesn't respond to initial treatments. You get in touch with his mother who says he's a Jehovah's witness and even though you tell her without blood he's in serious trouble, she insists that you do not give him any blood products at all. Question here is, what should be done at this point with this limited information?
Ultimately, I'm gonna put the rest of the real story in white text so as to avoid biasing everyone:
The trauma team don't give him blood products. He's transferred to a larger hospital's ICU. The pt's sister then is told what's going on, I forget how, but she rushes over because he is not a Jehovah's Witness and neither is she. They don't suscribe to their mother's religious practices. She can't prove this, he doesn't get blood products. At this point, even if she could prove it, his condition is so destablized that he suffers brain damage and then dies the next day. I will vouch that she was in fact correct as to her brother's religious beliefs
EDIT: this took place in Louisiana, not at one of my hospitals
23 year old drunk driver comes in very bad shape from an MVA. Unconscious, crit is horribly low, and doesn't respond to initial treatments. You get in touch with his mother who says he's a Jehovah's witness and even though you tell her without blood he's in serious trouble, she insists that you do not give him any blood products at all. Question here is, what should be done at this point with this limited information?
Ultimately, I'm gonna put the rest of the real story in white text so as to avoid biasing everyone:
The trauma team don't give him blood products. He's transferred to a larger hospital's ICU. The pt's sister then is told what's going on, I forget how, but she rushes over because he is not a Jehovah's Witness and neither is she. They don't suscribe to their mother's religious practices. She can't prove this, he doesn't get blood products. At this point, even if she could prove it, his condition is so destablized that he suffers brain damage and then dies the next day. I will vouch that she was in fact correct as to her brother's religious beliefs
EDIT: this took place in Louisiana, not at one of my hospitals