Abstract

BACKGROUND: Eclampsia accompanied by hemolysis elevated liver enzymes low platelet (HELLP) syndrome is an emergency condition during late trimester pregnancy characterized by hypertension, seizures, and coma. Obstetric history is known that the patient does not conducted antenatal care regularly to the doctor so that the patient does not know she has eclampsia. One of which complications due to eclampsia is intracerebral hemorrhage which is a major cause of death and morbidity in pregnant woman. This case report discusses how ethical and medicolegal decision-making for procedures to withholding or withdrawing life support for the critical care problem. The ethical dilemma faced by neuroanesthesia and critical care (NACC) consultants is whether to continue to treat patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) even though the results will be in vain or to restrict critical care because they concluded that the condition of the patient has a terminal stage. CASE REPORT: A reported case of a 23-year-old woman, pregnant, and had a caesarian section for the indication of eclampsia accompanied by HELLP syndrome in rural hospital. Because the patient’s condition worsened, she was referred to Zainoel Abidin hospital due to decrease in consciousness and a computed tomography scan of the head showed extensive bleeding. The results of the neuroanesthesia and neurosurgery team’s assessment stated that there was no indication of surgery on the patient because extensive bleeding had occurred accompanied by brain edema. The patient then undergoes treatment in the ICU to improve the patient’s critical condition. In an effort to overcome this problem, the NACC consultant consults with an ethics and medicolegal consultant as a representation of the medical committee and ethical committee to determine the withholding or withdrawing of life support therapy to the patient. CONCLUSION: Life support therapies that can be withhold or withdraw are simply an extraordinary treatment that provides no benefit. The basic principles of ethics in making decisions to do withholding and withdrawing life support in these patients are beneficence and non-maleficence, while the medicolegal principle in these patients lies in the patient’s condition being medically incurable (terminal state) and medical treatment is useless (futile treatment).

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