Do Patients Die Because They Have DNR Orders, or Do They Have DNR Orders Because They Are Going to Die?
- 1 August 1999
- journal article
- Published by Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health) in Medical Care
- Vol. 37 (8), 719-721
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199908000-00001
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Increased Risk of Death in Patients With Do-Not-Resuscitate OrdersMedical Care, 1999
- The timing of do-not-resuscitate orders and hospital costsJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1999
- Procedure-specific do-not-resuscitate orders. Effect on communication of treatment limitationsArchives of Internal Medicine, 1996
- Outcomes of patients with do-not-resuscitate orders. Toward an understanding of what do-not-resuscitate orders mean and how they affect patientsArchives of Internal Medicine, 1995
- The SUPPORT Prognostic Model: Objective Estimates of Survival for Seriously Ill Hospitalized AdultsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1995
- Evaluation of a treatment limitation policy with a specific treatment-limiting order pageArchives of Internal Medicine, 1994
- The quality of mercy. Caring for patients with 'do not resuscitate' ordersJama-Journal Of The American Medical Association, 1992
- The APACHE III Prognostic SystemSocial psychiatry. Sozialpsychiatrie. Psychiatrie sociale, 1991
- Resuscitation of patients with metastatic cancer. Is transient benefit still futile?Archives of Internal Medicine, 1991
- Survival after Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in the HospitalNew England Journal of Medicine, 1983