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- A lay summary of the Code of Practice for the diagnosis and . . .
Circulatory criteria require an examination of the person to confirm that there is no pulse, no heartbeat, no breathing and no consciousness over a minimum of five minutes
- Clinical death - Wikipedia
Clinical death is the medical term for cessation of blood circulation and breathing, the two criteria necessary to sustain the lives of human beings and of many other organisms [1]
- Diagnosis of death - Continuing Education in Anaesthesia, Critical Care . . .
Two appropriately qualified clinicians are required to diagnose brainstem death after exclusion of reversible causes of unconsciousness, confirmation of the absence of brainstem reflexes, and completion of apnoea testing
- Brain Death (Nursing) - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf
By definition, brain death carries 100% mortality Once the decision to proceed with the brain death determination has been made, three conditions must be present: coma, the absence of brainstem reflexes, and apnea
- Who Is Clinically Dead? The Medical Definition of Death
The clinical determination of brain death is based on three findings: deep coma or unresponsiveness, the complete absence of brainstem reflexes, and the lack of a spontaneous respiratory drive, known as apnea
- What is the Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA)?
This article covers the basics of the Uniform Declaration of Death Act (or UDDA), its legal significance, and examples of specific state laws addressing the criteria for declaring an individual's death Learn more at FindLaw's Patient Rights section
- What Is Clinical Death? - LifeSource
Clinical death is a term that describes the cessation (stopping) of a patient’s heart pumping blood through the body and, inevitably, is paired with a lack of breathing
- Hospitals, Families Still Struggle To Define Death: When Is Someone . . .
As per Smithsonian Magazine, the bottom line is that someone with no heartbeat, no breathing, and no brain activity equals clinical death, although it does not always mean death Clinical death
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