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Dive into the research topics where Leslie Whetstine is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Leslie Whetstine.


Critical Care | 2005

Pro/con ethics debate: When is dead really dead?

Leslie Whetstine; Stephen Streat; Mike Darwin; David Crippen

Contemporary intensive care unit (ICU) medicine has complicated the issue of what constitutes death in a life support environment. Not only is the distinction between sapient life and prolongation of vital signs blurred but the concept of death itself has been made more complex. The demand for organs to facilitate transplantation promotes a strong incentive to define clinical death in a manner that most effectively supplies that demand. We consider the problem of defining death in the ICU as a function of viable organ availability for transplantation


Critical Care | 2002

Pro/con ethics debate: is nonheart-beating organ donation ethically acceptable?

Leslie Whetstine; Kerry W. Bowman; Laura Hawryluck

This pro/con debate explores the ethical issues surrounding nonheart-beating organ donation (NHBD), a source of considerable controversy. It is estimated that NHBD can increase the number of organs available for transplant by 25% at a time of great need. However, should NHBD be ethically acceptable? In support of NHBD, it may be acceptable practice if there is a separation of the rationale to withdraw life support/to withhold cardiopulmonary resuscitation from the decision to recover organs, if no conflicts of interest exist, if a waiting time precluding spontaneous return of circulation is included, and if NHBD conforms to a standardized protocol. Against NHBD, there are questions regarding the ambiguity and cultural perspectives of death, regarding whether a separation of rationale between withdrawal and donation is sufficient to preclude conflicts of interest, and regarding whether variable protocols arise that subordinate the patient to the goal of donation. Such concerns suggest NHBD may damage the trust in patient-physician relationships and may adversely affect organ donation rates.


Critical Care | 2007

Bench-to-bedside review: When is dead really dead – on the legitimacy of using neurologic criteria to determine death

Leslie Whetstine

This review explores the legitimacy of the whole brain death (WBD) criterion. I argue that it does not fulfill the traditional biologic definition of death and is, therefore, an unsound clinical and philosophical criterion for death. I dispute whether the clinical tests used to diagnose WBD are sufficient to prove all critical brain functions have ceased, as well as examine the sets of brain functions that persist in many WBD patients. I conclude that the definition of death must be modified from a biologic to an ontologic model if we intend to maintain the WBD criterion.


Critical Care | 2003

Ethics roundtable debate: should a sedated dying patient be wakened to say goodbye to family?

Anna Batchelor; Leslie Jenal; Farhad Kapadia; Stephen Streat; Leslie Whetstine; Brian Woodcock

Intensivists have the potential to maintain vital signs almost indefinitely, but not necessarily the potential to make moribund patients whole. Current ethical and legal mandates push patient autonomy to the forefront of care plans. When patients are incapable of expressing their preferences, surrogates are given proxy. It is unclear how these preferences extend to the very brink of inevitable death. Some say that patients should have the opportunity and authority to direct their death spiral. Others say it would be impossible for them to do so because an inevitable death spiral cannot be effectively palliated. Humane principles dictate they be spared the unrelenting discomfort surrounding death. The present case examines such a patient and the issues surrounding a unique end-of-life decision.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2007

Euthanasia: a word no longer to be used or abused.

Michael A. Kuiper; Leslie Whetstine; John L. Holmes; Stephen Streat; Richard Burrows; Ian Seppelt; David Crippen


Critical Care | 2000

Debate: What constitutes 'terminality' and how does it relate to a Living Will?

David Crippen; Mitchell M. Levy; Robert D. Truog; Leslie Whetstine; John M. Luce


Critical Care | 2004

Ethics roundtable debate: Withdrawal of tube feeding in a patient with persistent vegetative state where the patients wishes are unclear and there is family dissension

Tom Buckley; David Crippen; Anthony L DeWitt; Fisher Mm; Antonios Liolios; Christine L Scheetz; Leslie Whetstine


Critical Care Medicine | 2009

Shortening the dying process: More than a feelin'.

Leslie Whetstine; David Crippen


Critical Care Medicine | 2004

Noninvasive ventilation and palliative care: Unfolding the promise.

David Crippen; Leslie Whetstine


Critical Care | 2001

'Round-table' ethical debate: is a suicide note an authoritative 'living will'?

Donald B Chalfin; David Crippen; Cory Franklin; David F Kelly; Jack K Kilcullen; Stephen Streat; Robert D. Truog; Leslie Whetstine

Collaboration


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David Crippen

University of Pittsburgh

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Robert D. Truog

Boston Children's Hospital

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Richard Burrows

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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John M. Luce

University of California

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