Effect of ethics consultations on nonbeneficial life-sustaining treatments in the intensive care setting: a randomized controlled trial.
暂无分享,去创建一个
T. Gilmer | R. Cranford | L. Schneiderman | D. Dugan | H. Teetzel | J. Blustein | K. Briggs | Glen Komatsu | Paula Goodman-Crews | F. Cohn | E. Young | Kathleen B. Briggs | Glen I. Komatsu
[1] C. Robertson,et al. A study of proactive ethics consultation for critically and terminally ill patients with extended lengths of stay. , 1998, Critical care medicine.
[2] K. Morton,et al. Evaluation of an ethics consultation service: patient and family perspective. , 1996, The American journal of medicine.
[3] L. Esserman,et al. Potentially ineffective care. A new outcome to assess the limits of critical care. , 1995, JAMA.
[4] M D Silverstein,et al. An ethics consultation service in a teaching hospital. Utilization and evaluation. , 1989, JAMA.
[5] T. Gilmer,et al. Impact of ethics consultations in the intensive care setting: A randomized, controlled trial , 2000, Critical care medicine.
[6] V W Berger,et al. Pros and cons of permutation tests in clinical trials. , 2000, Statistics in medicine.
[7] J. McClung,et al. Evaluation of a medical ethics consultation service: opinions of patients and health care providers. , 1996, The American journal of medicine.
[8] R. Orr,et al. Effectiveness of an ethics consultation service. , 1993, The Journal of family practice.
[9] L. Schneiderman,et al. Impact of Pediatric Ethics Consultations on Patients, Families, Social Workers, and Physicians , 1999, Journal of Perinatology.
[10] C. Stocking,et al. Community hospital ethics consultation: evaluation and comparison with a university hospital service. , 1992, The American journal of medicine.