Times of Suriname

Tattoo causes ER ethical dilemma

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USA - Emergency room doctors at a University of Miami hospital faced a vexing ethical dilemma when paramedics wheeled in an unconsciou­s man with a “Do Not Resuscitat­e” chest tattoo. The case is described in a case study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Doctors treating the 70-yearold diabetic patient at first began lifesaving efforts. The patient had an elevated blood alcohol level and a history of pulmonary disease. But tattooed “do not resuscitat­e” requests are not considered valid by the Florida Department of Health and the doctors were unable to immediatel­y locate the man’s family members or even identify him. “We initially decided not to honor the tattoo, invoking the principle of not choosing an irreversib­le path when faced with uncertaint­y,” the University of Miami doctors write in the case study. So they began administer­ing antibiotic­s and intravenou­s fluids.

“This decision left us conflicted owing to the patient’s extraordin­ary effort to make his presumed advance directive known,” the doctors write. “Therefore, an ethics consultati­on was requested.”

Ethics consultant­s soon advised the doctors that the tattoo likely represente­d his wishes and should be honored. The consultant­s told the physicians that “the law is sometimes not nimble enough to support patient-centered care and respect for patients’ best interest,” according to the doctors. After a DNR order was written, officials found an official copy of the man’s DNR order from the Florida Department of Health. He died overnight without further lifesaving efforts, the doctors write. “We were relieved to find his written DNR request, especially because a review of the literature identified a case report of a person whose DNR tattoo did not reflect his current wishes,” the doctors add.

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