Centre: Patients, kin can refuse ICU care

The guidelines recommended that when no further treatment is possible in terminally ill patients, then keeping in ICU is futile care.

Update: 2024-01-03 01:15 GMT

Representative image (Photo: Reuters)

NEW DELHI: Hospitals cannot admit critically ill patients in the intensive care unit in case of refusal by them and their relatives, the Union Health Ministry has said in its recent guidelines.

The guidelines compiled by 24 experts further recommended that when no further treatment is possible or available in a disease or if the continuation of therapy is not going make an impact on the outcome, especially survival, in terminally ill patients, then keeping in ICU is futile care.

Further, anyone with a living will or advanced directive against ICU care should not be admitted to ICU.

Besides, low priority criteria in case of a pandemic or disaster situation, where there is resource limitation, should be taken into account for keeping a patient in the ICU. Criteria for admitting a patient to ICU should be based on organ failure and need for organ support or in anticipation of deterioration in the medical condition, it said.

Altered level of consciousness of recent onset, hemodynamic instability, need for respiratory support, patients with acute illness requiring intensive monitoring and/or organ support or any medical condition or disease with anticipation of deterioration have been listed as criteria for ICU admission.

Patients who have experienced any major intraoperative complication like cardiovascular or respiratory instability or have undergone major surgery also feature among the criteria.

Return of physiological aberrations to near normal or baseline status, reasonable resolution and stability of the acute illness that necessitated ICU admission, patient/family agreeing for ICU discharge for a treatment-limiting decision or palliative care have been mentioned in the ICU discharge criteria.

According to the guidelines, parameters like blood pressure; pulse, respiratory, and heart rate; breathing pattern, oxygen saturation, urine output and neurological status, etc. should be monitored in a patient awaiting an ICU bed.

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