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Physician Assisted Suicide Case Study

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Josie, a vibrant 18 month old little girl who accidently stepped into a scalding hot bathtub of water. Her mother, Sorrel, heard Josie’s screams and ran upstairs to find her daughter severely burned. Josie’s father, Tony, called 911 and Josie was rushed to Johns Hopkins Hospital. “Most of all I wonder how I allowed myself to let her out of my sight.” (King p. 21) This is what Sorrel was thinking while she sat next to Josie in the hospital bed. Sorrel felt as if she had failed as a mother; she let her baby get hurt. A mechanic figured out that the water Josie sat in was about 150 degrees fahrenheit. Josie had second-degree burns on sixty percent of her body. The first few days, Josie was on a breathing ventilator and the doctors had to remove the dead tissue from the burn sites. The dressings were changed at least twice a day and they had to perform skin …show more content…
Sorrel journaled throughout the whole stay at the hospital. She kept track of the names of anyone who cared for Josie. She would ask them what they were doing to her daughter and wrote it all down. SOrrel stayed by her daughter the whole time and got very involved in the treatment of her daughter. After two weeks, Josie got well enough to move off the PICU floor to the immediate-care unit. This made Sorrel uneasy as she would have to get used to new nurses and doctors. She had formed relationships with a lot of the people involved in Josie’s care. The doctors reassured her that Josie would still get good care on the new unit. At home, Josie’s siblings made cards and colored pictures to welcome home their little sister soon. One day, Sorrel noticed Josie looked very thirsty and cried for water when it came into her sight. Sorrel tried to give her fluids but all Josie would do is spit them up. The nurse advised Sorrel not to give her anymore. All of Josie’s tests came back normal but Sorrel knew something was wrong with her

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