Dignifying the End of Life in the Intensive Care Unit.
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Copyright (c) 2017 Luis Alberto Computaro, Miguel A. Muchico, José Angarola, Adrian Sarasino, Néstor Raimondi, Fernando Baccaro, Dinah Magnante, Ignacio Previgliano

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33821/206Keywords:
CRITICAL CARE, DEATH, TANATOLOGY, PERSONAL AUTONOMYAbstract
Frequently, when a person falls ill, a complicated process of medical visits, use of sophisticated auxiliary means for diagnosis, and the establishment of treatments that are becoming more and more complex and expensive starts. When, instead of the patient’s getting cured, the illness advances, the patient becomes overwhelmed due to the new and highly developed explorations that pursue a more precise diagnosis of the illness in order to establish more aggressive therapeutic measures. As it is expected, the illness, in many cases, continues advancing and reaches a moment in which both the patient and their close relatives, as well as the medical team, wonder until when it is still reasonable to continue with the treatments. This crossroads is the point of decision to accept death as a natural event. Most of the times, nevertheless, death is perceived as a failure, not as the natural story of serious processes.