I haven't taken the relevant law, but I finished a biomedical ethics course last semester and euthanasia is a softball as compared to things like healthcare allocations, organ donation, and all the other limited-resources problems.
The problem with euthanasia, as seen in this thread, is that lots of vague personal beliefs creep in.
As far as the relevance of this thread to EMS, which was the point of my earlier post, euthanasia doesn't happen in the prehospital environment. Outside of that, any EMS providers involved seem to be techs under the direction of a doctor, which is a different environment. Ethical issues are less important there because you're not making any ethically significant decisions beyond participate/find another job. As much as I love interesting, discussion-provoking threads, this doesn't seem to have provoked discussion as much as shouting matches.
Also, is there really a Scilon on here?
So do you think additional education on the subject is a waste of time?
Any discussion about organ procurement, which has now crossed the boundaries beyond brain death, can give the EMS provider a different way to look at death. If you get a chance to see the respect given to a body by procurement teams and the surgeons present to retrieve the organs, it enlightening and almost a spiritual experience within a scientific world.
Yes, EMS providers do deal with Euthanasia issues. They transport patients to Comfort Care and Hospice facilities all the time. They pick up patients from LTC facilities who for some reason have reversed their comfort care orders. They may know of their regular dialysis patients that have made a decision to no longer have dialysis. Some patients may even want to talk about their decision, death or life.
Are EMS providers going to directly pull the plug on a ventilator...no. But, they will have a better understanding when an ETT is pulled from a conscious and alert patient in the ED that has made it clear NO INTUBATION and then goes on to die. Pulling the tube is assisting the patient to fullfil his/her wish.
If they have some knowledge of the law and principles of ethics before they are faced with them, they have a chance to confront some of their own issues. It is much better to deal with this in a classroom for the first time rather than losing it in front of a patient, their family and other professionals.
One of the last times we allowed a Paramedic student into our NICU was unfortunately the same day we were withdrawing life support from a baby. The student called us all, including the parents, murderers and ran out of the unit telling everyone he saw us kill a baby but from his limited point of view. Agreed the Paramedic student probably should not have been part of this but some thought that death should be part of the education also.
We have had numerous threads here about working the dead, especially children, for many reasons. However, most of the reasons come down to the healthcare providers' beliefs and not necessarily those of the family. Death, euthanasia, suicide, assisted suicide, end-of-life, comfort care, hospice and DNR are all things that should be discussed in a classroom dedicated to those subjects and not just a paragraph in an EMT or Paramedic text.