https://edition.cnn.com/2021/03/18/uk/uk-do-not-resuscitate-consent-pandemic-gbr-intl/index.html
More than 500 people in the United Kingdom were put on do-not-resuscitate orders without their consent or their carers' consent during the coronavirus pandemic, according to a study released by England's care watchdog on Thursday.
"From
the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, there were concerns that 'do
not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation' (DNACPR) decisions were being
made without involving people, or their families and/or carers if so
wished, and were being applied to groups of people, rather than taking
into account each person's individual circumstances," the Care Quality
Commission (CQC) study said.
Out
of 2,048 adult social care providers who responded to the CQC's
information request, 5.2% (508 out of 9,679) of DNACPR decisions put in
place since March 17, 2020 "had not been agreed in discussion with the
person, their relative or carer," it said. In one care home, everyone
over 80 with dementia had a DNACPR order applied, the report found.
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