On
October 1983, the 35th World Medical Assembly in Venice , Italy
adopted as below:
- The duty
of the physician is to heal and, where possible, relieve suffering and act
to protect the best interests of his patients.
- There
shall be no exception to this principle even in the case of incurable
disease or malformation.
- This
principle does not preclude application of the following rules
- The
physician may relieve suffering of a terminally ill patient by
withholding treatment with the consent of the patient or his immediate
family if unable to express his will.
- Withholding
of treatment does not free the physician from his obligation to assist
the dying person and give him the necessary medicaments to mitigate the
terminal phase of his illness.
- The
physician shall refrain from employing any extraordinary means which
would prove of no benefit for the patient.
- The
physician may, when the patient cannot reverse the final process of
cessation of vital functions, apply such artificial means as are
necessary to keep organs active for transplantation provided he acts in
accordance with the laws of the country or by virtue of a formal consent
given by the responsible person.
- The
certification of death or the irreversibility of vital activity had been
made by physicians unconnected with the transplantation and the patient
receiving treatment.
- These
artificial means shall not be paid for by the donor or his relatives.
Physicians treating the donor shall be totally independent of those
treating the recipient and of the recipient himself.
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