Time of Care and Time of Dying: A Multidisciplinary Case Report on End-of-Life Experience Within the Italian Legal Framework
Letizia Iannopollo, Eleonora Pinto, Pamela Iannizzi, Flavia Salmaso, Alessandra Feltrin

TL;DR
This case study explores a cancer patient's end-of-life decisions within Italy's legal framework, emphasizing multidisciplinary care to support self-determination and dignity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel approach to end-of-life care by integrating psychological, legal-ethical, and palliative care perspectives in a multidisciplinary team setting.
Findings
Multidisciplinary teamwork can help patients maintain identity and dignity at the end of life.
Respecting patient values and history is crucial in end-of-life decision-making.
Effective end-of-life accompaniment requires collaboration among physicians, nurses, and psychologists.
Abstract
In this segment of the Palliative Care Unit case series, we introduce a patient with a long history of oncological treatments for recurrent breast cancer. After active treatments and a global control of the neoplasm, disease progression made the patient access different lines of chemotherapies, even asking for them in anticipation of a few advantages in the balance between benefits and risks. When the patient decided to permanently discontinue chemotherapy, she felt she had disrupted her values. Also, as a reaction to breaking bad news without estimating alternative paths, she considered her deteriorating condition as the sole criterion for assisted dying in another country. Could this be a self-consistent choice for this patient, so determined to find and pursue possibilities in treatment previously? Should this clue respond precisely to the patient’s needs? This contribution’s…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Patient Dignity and Privacy · Bioethics and Human Rights Issues
