59 articles – 21 Notices  [english version]
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(Palliative care in delivery room for preterm infants less than 24weeks of gestation. Analysis of two different behaviors.)
Pierre M., Plu I., Hervé C., Bétrémieux P.
Arch Pediatr (2011) epub ahead of print - http://www.hal.inserm.fr/inserm-00612138
(21396801)
[Palliative care in delivery room for preterm infants less than 24weeks of gestation. Analysis of two different behaviors.]
M. Pierre1, Isabelle Plu2, Christian Hervé2, Pierre Bétrémieux1
1 :  Service de réanimation néonatale
Hôpital Sud
16,boulevard de Bulgarie, BP90347,35203 Rennes cedex2
France
2 :  LEM - Laboratoire d'éthique médicale et médecine légale
Université Paris V - Paris Descartes
Faculté de médecine, 45 rue des Saints-Pères, Paris 75006
France
AIMS OF THE STUDY: To describe the management of extremely preterm newborns at the threshold of viability before 24weeks of gestation in the delivery room when the decision has been made not to provide intensive care; to assess the role of palliative care (PC); to report the problems encountered. METHOD: A prospective qualitative study was conducted using semi-structured interviews from November 2009 to June 2010 in two level III French maternity hospitals (A and B). In each center, four midwives, two obstetricians, two pediatricians, two anesthetists, and one chief midwife were interviewed. RESULTS: In maternity hospital A, a protocol was in place that proposed PC derived from developmental care (noise limitation, drying, warming) provided by parents or staff. The problems reported were related to former euthanasia practices rather than new procedures. In maternity hospital B, no palliative care protocol had been set up. Euthanasia was practiced and accepted fatalistically because the only currently existing alternative (letting the infant die) was considered inhumane. Few problems were reported. The reluctance to carry out PC is conceptual and organizational (the ratio of births per midwife in maternity hospital B was twice that of maternity hospital A). Lexical analysis showed preferential use of the words "fetus" and "expulsion" versus "child" and "delivery" in maternity hospital B (p<0.05) when speaking of the delivery of the extremely preterm infant. Our explanatory hypothesis is that the concept of "fetus ex utero" legitimates euthanasia by assimilating it to feticide. CONCLUSION: At the time of this study, two very different approaches to the death of extremely preterm, non-resuscitated newborns in the delivery room coexisted in France. Palliative care is obviously possible, after group reflection, if a true motivation to change, a better understanding of the law, and a clear identification of the respective status of the fetus and the newborn exist in the maternity hospital.
Sciences du Vivant/Ethique
Sciences du Vivant/Médecine humaine et pathologie/Pédiatrie
Français
1769-664X

Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture
10.1016/j.arcped.2011.01.031
Arch Pediatr
internationale
11/03/2011
11/03/2011
epub ahead of print