I'm not being rude here but how do you know you are improving dying? Why are you calling it an experience & obsessed with death & not life. Why can't medics follow the Oath and 'do no harm' & 'not play God' & just try to make pts better & if not - they will die in their own time
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You rarely see clinicians HIGHLIGHTING the logical consequences of Montgomery - there was some heated debate on BMJ at the time - and it clearly 'hasn't yet been the turning point it should have been'. Nursing Times seemed to almost totally ignore Montgomery.
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Really? I was paying less attention around that time, outside of the judgement details themselves. But it's not like @nursingtimesed to let a big story go by normally.
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The thing is - I suspect - despite their 'we are autonomous professionals' assertions, I think many nurses are typically 'tasked': so Montgomery is in reality [if incorrectly so] less of an issue for many nurses, than for most doctors?
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Interesting phrasing. What do you mean by 'tasked' in this context, Mike?
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Nurses are often 'implementing' treatments, which have already been 'decided'. When my mum was dying, GP 'asked for consent from her': a 999 paramedic 'asked for consent': district nurses started with 'We've been sent by the GP to do ...'.
End of conversation
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