Ethics/End of Life
Category: Bonus CE
An Ethical Challenge in the Pediatric Cardiac ICU: Balancing Hope Versus Harm With Heroic Intervention
Mithya Lewis-Newby, MD, MPH, (she/her/hers)
Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Attending
Seattle Children's Hospital and University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
Thanks to significant medical and surgical advancements and innovations in the past century, most children with critical heart disease can hope to live a long and healthy life. Unfortunately, despite these advancements, some children do not respond to conventional therapies and are at high-risk of dying. Under these heart-breaking circumstances, some families and medical teams may understandably search for alternative therapies that may help save the child’s life. Under such dire circumstances, unconventional cardiac surgical or catheter-based interventions are sometimes considered. These interventions are often unproven, with unclear risks and benefits. The use of unconventional heroic therapies can in some cases be lifesaving and in other cases only place additional burdens on the child without a positive outcome. These decisions are rife with ethical questions. An ethical approach to the consideration of unconventional interventions under these dire and often time-pressured circumstances in the cardiac intensive care unit is necessary to protect the best-interests of the child and optimize the medical decision-making process.
An ethical approach to the consideration of unconventional interventions under these dire and often time-pressured circumstances in the cardiac intensive care unit is necessary to protect the best-interests of the child and optimize the medical decision-making process.