With the continuing progress of obstetrical and neonatal care, the limit of human viability has continued to shift towards younger gestational ages. The survival rate as well as the survival without disability increases with each additional week of gestation but, for infants born from 22 to 25 w GA, it is still really low, and the threshold of human viability appears to be limited to the physiological development of the lungs, which take place around the 23rd-24th w GA. At present, the care of such infants, born at the threshold of human viability, presents a variety of complex medical, social, and economical decisions assuming the characteristics of ethical decisions in that the limits between benefits and disadvantages is not so clearcut. What is the true infant's best interest is far to be understood and concern about the ethical basis of providing such intensive care is arising in the scientific community. In this paper the authors provide a review of the ethical basis of decisions related to the care of such infants: to treat, not to treat, intensive or compassionate care, withhold or withdraw treatment.

[Intensive care at extremely low gestational age: ethical issues and treatment choices] / Pignotti, M S; Toraldo di Francia, M; Donzelli, G. - In: PEDIATRIA MEDICA E CHIRURGICA. - ISSN 0391-5387. - STAMPA. - 29:(2007), pp. 84-93.

[Intensive care at extremely low gestational age: ethical issues and treatment choices]

TORALDO DI FRANCIA, MONICA;DONZELLI, GIAN PAOLO
2007

Abstract

With the continuing progress of obstetrical and neonatal care, the limit of human viability has continued to shift towards younger gestational ages. The survival rate as well as the survival without disability increases with each additional week of gestation but, for infants born from 22 to 25 w GA, it is still really low, and the threshold of human viability appears to be limited to the physiological development of the lungs, which take place around the 23rd-24th w GA. At present, the care of such infants, born at the threshold of human viability, presents a variety of complex medical, social, and economical decisions assuming the characteristics of ethical decisions in that the limits between benefits and disadvantages is not so clearcut. What is the true infant's best interest is far to be understood and concern about the ethical basis of providing such intensive care is arising in the scientific community. In this paper the authors provide a review of the ethical basis of decisions related to the care of such infants: to treat, not to treat, intensive or compassionate care, withhold or withdraw treatment.
2007
29
84
93
Pignotti, M S; Toraldo di Francia, M; Donzelli, G
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1093133
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