DC Treatment: Difference between revisions

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The '''DC Treat''' checkbox on the Registry page of the PDA tracks the withdrawal of therapy when it is appropriate (stopping Intensive Care therapies that would prolong the process of dying)
The '''DC Treat''' checkbox on the Registry page of the PDA tracks the withdrawal of treatment in dying ICU patients when appropriate.
Mark the TX DC checkbox on the PDA for patients if the decision is made to discontinue treatment. This checkbox should not be used on the medical wards, only in the ICU's. 
Withdrawal of treatment is not the same as withdrawal of care.  DC Treatment in an ICU setting occurs because it is often possible to maintain life for long periods of time without any hope of recovery.  Intensive care is a means of supporting organ systems and it is not always curative.  Prolonging the process of dying is not in the patient's best interests nor is it ethical.  <ref name="ABC">  Winter,B. & Cohen,S. (1999).  ABC of intensive care. Withdrawal of treatment. ''BMJ 319'', 306-308.</ref>
 
== When to code "DC Treat" ==
* when the decision is made to discontinue treatment in ICU
* even if [[Palliative Care]] (90400) is provided and coded
 
== When not to code "DC Treat" ==
* "DC Treat" is not coded on Medicine wards


== Notes ==
A person could have treatment withdrawn (DC Treatment box checked)  and then still require palliative care for a time after this so the diagnosis of [[Palliative Care]] (90400) can still be coded in this scenario. 


== Additional info needed to de-stub ==
== Additional info needed to de-stub ==
Withdrawal of treatment is not the same as withdrawal of care.  DC Treatment in an ICU setting occurs because it is often possible to maintain life for long periods of time without any hope of recovery.  Intensive care is a means of supporting organ systems and it is not always curative.  Prolonging the process of dying is not in the patient's best interests or is it ethical.  Reference:  Winter,B. & Cohen,S. (1999).  ABC of intensive care. Withdrawal of treatment. ''BMJ 319'', 306-308.
 
This article came about because of article [[Palliative care vs DC TX]]; when this and the [[Palliative Care]] article are cleaned up, then [[Palliative care vs DC TX]] should be removed.
* This article came about because of article [[Palliative care vs DC TX]]; when this and the [[Palliative Care]] article are cleaned up, then [[Palliative care vs DC TX]] should be removed.




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Revision as of 19:38, 6 May 2008

The DC Treat checkbox on the Registry page of the PDA tracks the withdrawal of treatment in dying ICU patients when appropriate.

Withdrawal of treatment is not the same as withdrawal of care. DC Treatment in an ICU setting occurs because it is often possible to maintain life for long periods of time without any hope of recovery. Intensive care is a means of supporting organ systems and it is not always curative. Prolonging the process of dying is not in the patient's best interests nor is it ethical. <ref name="ABC"> Winter,B. & Cohen,S. (1999). ABC of intensive care. Withdrawal of treatment. BMJ 319, 306-308.</ref>

When to code "DC Treat"

  • when the decision is made to discontinue treatment in ICU
  • even if Palliative Care (90400) is provided and coded

When not to code "DC Treat"

  • "DC Treat" is not coded on Medicine wards


Additional info needed to de-stub


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