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  1. Balancing Legitimate Critical-Care Interests: Setting Defensible Care Limits Through Policy Development.Jeffrey Kirby - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (1):38-47.
    Critical-care decision making is highly complex, given the need for health care providers and organizations to consider, and constructively respond to, the diverse interests and perspectives of a variety of legitimate stakeholders. Insights derived from an identified set of ethics-related considerations have the potential to meaningfully inform inclusive and deliberative policy development that aims to optimally balance the competing obligations that arise in this challenging, clinical decision-making domain. A potential, constructive outcome of such policy engagement is the collaborative development of (...)
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  • Documentation of best interest by intensivists: a retrospective study in an Ontario critical care unit.Mohana Ratnapalan, Andrew B. Cooper, Damon C. Scales & Ruxandra Pinto - 2010 - BMC Medical Ethics 11 (1):1.
    Intensive care physicians often must rely on substitute decision makers to address all dimensions of the construct of.
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