Volume 43, Issue 4 pp. 372-377
Case Report
Free Access

Medical futility and psychiatry: Palliative care and hospice care as a last resort in the treatment of refractory anorexia nervosa

Amy Lopez LCSW

Corresponding Author

Amy Lopez LCSW

Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado

Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Hospital, Denver, ColoradoSearch for more papers by this author
Joel Yager MD

Joel Yager MD

Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado

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Robert E. Feinstein MD

Robert E. Feinstein MD

Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado

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First published: 14 May 2009
Citations: 58

Abstract

Objective

The concept of medical futility is accepted in general medicine, yet little attention has been paid to its application in psychiatry. We explore how medical futility and principles of palliation may contribute to the management of treatment refractory anorexia nervosa.

Method

We review the case of a 30-year-old woman with chronic anorexia nervosa, treated unsuccessfully for several years.

Results

Ongoing assessment, including ethical consultation, determined that further active treatment was unlikely to resolve her condition. The patient was referred for palliative care and hospice care, and ultimately died.

Discussion

Although circumstances requiring its use are rare, palliative care may play a role in the treatment of long suffering, treatment refractory patients. For poor prognosis patients who are unresponsive to competent treatment, continue to decline physiologically and psychologically, and appear to face an inexorably terminal course, palliative care and hospice may be a humane alternative. © 2009 by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Eat Disord 2010

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