trauma1534
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Hello everyone... I ran into a very unusual thing last week at work. We were dispatched out to a 59 yof, possibly not breathing. When we got there, was an EMT already on the scene, working a code. When I walked in, I found a lady laying in a hospital type bed, with CPR in progress. The EMT reported to us that she had only been down about a min before his arrival, and she is a hospice patient with no valid DNR... and family was begging him to do something. They had just became a Hospice patient, and all the paper work was not final yet. Well... I checked patient for a pulse, breathing, all that stuff. Nothing. My partner was hooking up the AED. I took compressions while all this was happening. The EMT on scene started just bagging with good ventilation... very good rise and fall of cx. We hit analize... it said check patient... when I check for a corotid, there it was... just bounding. Good... now we have a pulse... time to secure an airway... nothing but agonal resps at this time. So I tubed her... perfect tube. Now... assisting her breathing with her own resps picking up to 12 a min, still unresponsive. We have a good HR at 100, good resps at 12 with assistance and intubated. All of a sudden, the one who wanted us to work her, steps up and now wants us to stop working her. We have a patient back. Now, they want to let her go!!! GRRRR!!!! So I explained to the family member that we now have her back. We are getting ready to transport. The Family memeber is now begging me to stop working her. She has POA. So... my partner called med control. The Dr. gave us the order to stop everything... pull the tube and put her on a NRB, and keep her on the monitor, and wait for Hospice to arrive or her to expire which ever comes first, if that is the family's wishes. So... I explained again the the family that she was back... good heart rate... good increasing resps...they still wanted to stop it all. So... I pulled the tube... put her on 15 lpm NRB, and let her be. She lasted exactly an hour. This was a hard call for me to deal with. While she was terminal, if there is no valid DNR, the EMT responder did the right thing by working her. We got her back and then had to pull her airway and let her die. When hospice arrived, right before she took her last breath, the nurse told us that we did the right thing. She stated that the moment that CPR was initiated, the patient was no longer a hospice patient. We had no choice but to work it. What would you have done and why?