Just because a person has had a fall, does not mean that he should be put on the pathway, giving fluids can and of course does aid recovery.
A fall with any old person, let alone at the age of this gentleman, will be very serious. If his mouth is dry, fluid can be given through a straw, with one end of the straw sealed, to ensure it just drips in. There has been a reported recovery, using this method, also small teaspoonful's of water, or a cloth can be administered. If NHS staff try to prevent this, then in my opinion they are not acting in the best interests of the patient.
It is absolutely irrefutably true to say that the LCP has been used incorrectly and decisions have been made based on assumptions, which have turned out be an incorrect evaluation and those decisions have led to the death of the patient.
In fact there is no need to use the Pathway at all. Instead, care should be based at an individual level, whilst a patient may indeed be dying, there is no way the exact time of death can be predicted and the removal of fluid can lead to a very unpleasant death, by dehydration. Particularly if forced over long period of time.
If this gentleman is taking fluids through a cloth or drops of water, then he wants to drink, removal of fluids at this point is quite simply unethical and unprincipled. Members of close family should be informed if the LCP is in place, however you can refuse this, if you believe it is being misused, or that the criteria for the implementation of the LCP is being abused.
I do not ascribe to or support the LCP being used in a routine manner, it should only be used alongside the strictest and stringent of criteria and diagnostic assessment! The abuse of the protocol of the Liverpool Care Pathway, under no doubt at all amounts to killing the patient, it is as simple as that.
There is no justification to withhold fluid and just because a patient cannot reach water, it does not mean that they do not want or need water. If there is any indication at all that the patient is willing to take even the smallest drops of water, then the LCP protocol is simply being abused! -
Finally as regards intervention this is what makes us human, if you think about it, if no one intervened when a motor accident happened,in many cases there would be a certainty of death. Intervening makes us human and is a compassionate act, depriving fluids however is not.