
The RCN said only consultant nurses or senior nurses who have a supervisory role would be able to make these decisions.General secretary Dr Peter Carter said: 'This joint guidance recognises the important part that nurses play in decisions related to resuscitation.Dr Vivienne Nathanson of the BMA added: 'In TV medical dramas, CPR is often the wonder intervention that saves patients' lives and reunites them with their loved ones.'Unfortunately, in real life the survival rate after a patient has a cardiac arrest and receives CPR is relatively low.'Nurses will only be able to make such decisions if their local hospital trust agrees they can.The Department of Health leaves it up to professional bodies such as the BMA issue guidance and individual trusts decide how to implement them.SOS-NHS Patients in Danger, a group formed by relatives who believe a loved one died because of deliberate starvation, dehydration or with-holding of medication, have criticised the guidelines.Spokesman Julia Quenzler said: 'This sounds like yet another nail in the coffin for vulnerable elderly patients.'By giving a senior nurse this power, is it yet another means of distancing doctors from their patients' deaths?'Katherine Murphy, chief executive of the Patients' Association, called for greater clarity over which nurses should be allowed to take life-or-death decisions.We would hope that these senior nurses will be properly qualified and in a position to make these decisions,' she added.
As in the days of Noah....