Sentences with phrase «of irreversible decline»

(a) they have a serious and incurable illness, disease or disability; (b) they are in an advanced state of irreversible decline in capability; (c) that illness, disease or disability or that state of decline causes them enduring physical or psychological suffering that is intolerable to them and that can not be relieved under conditions that they consider acceptable; and (d) their natural death has become reasonably foreseeable, taking into account all of their medical circumstances, without a prognosis necessarily having been made as to the specific length of time that they have remaining.
An individual's condition will be considered «grievous and irremediable» if it is serious and incurable, has put them in an «advanced state of irreversible decline in capacity», has caused them intolerable, enduring physical or psychological suffering, and where their natural death is reasonably foreseeable.
Rather than waiting for signs of an irreversible decline in mental abilities or other, more serious cognitive problems, it would be prudent to take steps to support the brain's ability to heal and self - repair.

Not exact matches

Pollster Frank Graves of Ekos Research points out that Jean Chrétien's 1993 win wasn't followed by any «post-election swoon,» while Paul Martin after 2004 and Stephen Harper after 2011 suffered declines which, far from being short - term slumps, proved irreversible.
• Instead of the birth of Iranian democracy, the crisis that followed the June elections may portend the irreversible decline of an ancient country.
«Today the Roman Catholic Church in the United States is on the verge of either an irreversible decline or a thoroughgoing transformation» is the topic sentence of Peter Steinfels» extraordinarily valuable survey...
The book's tone of urgency and its copious use of war metaphors left many readers with the distinct impression that American politics was experiencing an irreversible decline.
Thus does John Updike report on Wilmot's abrupt and irreversible deconversion experience at the outset of In the Beauty of the Lilies, a four - generation saga which is partly a fictional version of Updike's family history, partly an account of the decline of religious faith in America, and partly a reflection of Updike's own angry, personal struggle to find religious meaning.
That Rooney of late has been alternating superbly taken goals with episodes of sluggishness, confirming Ferguson's alleged view that he is overweight and thus not fully match fit, suggests that he may be in irreversible decline.
Mass bleaching and mortality are identified as the current crisis to corals, and based on the current rate of increase in global CO2 emissions (now exceeding 3 % per year), most reefs world - wide are committed to an irreversible decline.
Current FDA - approved medications, including Aricept, Razadyne and Exelon, offer only fleeting short - term benefits for Alzheimer's patients, but they do nothing to slow the steady, irreversible decline of brain function that erases a person's memory and ability to think clearly.
In a second study, published in the journal Stem Cells Translational Medicine, the team showed that in rodents they could use the same type of lung cell to successfully treat a model of IPF — a chronic, irreversible, and ultimately fatal disease characterized by a progressive decline in lung function.
You apply a comic sensibility to subjects that include aging, illness and death and what seems like the irreversible decline of the town of North Bath, New York.
In humans, aging is defined as the inevitable and irreversible decline in organ function that occurs over time even in the absence of illness, injury, or poor lifestyle choices.1
In «Southern 992321,» Halvorson brings us in intimate contact with the decline of the American industrial empire, the irreversible decaying of its infrastructures.
Nearly fifteen years ago one of us observed: «We have only four decades left in which to gain control over our major environmental problems if we are to avoid irreversible ecological decline
This year's airborne campaign, which began its first flight Thursday morning, will revisit a section of the Antarctic ice sheet that recently was found to be in irreversible decline.
There is an «irreversible decline» of coal power across the G7 countries, with the US and UK leading the way, finds new research by the non-profit environmental organisation E3G.
situations involving the removal of a seriously ill person in which substantial grounds have been shown for believing that he or she, although not at imminent risk of dying, would face a real risk, on account of the absence of appropriate treatment in the receiving country or the lack of access to such treatment, of being exposed to a serious, rapid and irreversible decline in his or her state of health resulting in intense suffering or to a significant reduction in life expectancy.
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