NRP and not ACLS algorithms apply to a neonate. Unfortunately some do try to treat infants and peds as small adults.
If one takes an NRP class there are guidelines about the terminination of resuscitation of a neonate. Your medical director should incorporate these guidelines into your protocols. Dead is dead. Leave your own personal emotions out of it. Of course, many EMS services will not allow their providers to pronounce death of a child so you would have no choice but to work through your protocol. But, if the baby is dead you are not doing the mother any good by doing a show code.
I may in the wrong here, but here we go. There seems to be several others here who have least implied for us to "leave our emotions behind", or something else to the same effect. Maybe I am overly emotional, and perhaps my motivations and expressions here are a direct reflection of this, however I have done things a certain way for many years, and they have always served me well at the end of the day. I am not saying I am not open to change, nor am I saying treatments cannot be altered for the betterment of patient care, but from an "emotional" standpoint, I see no problem with how I conduct business.
This situation here, and those like it, are without a doubt disturbing to any sane human being, and we are clinicians are no more immune then anyone else. To say performing advanced and aggressive resuscitation techniques on this child would be a waste of time, or not worth the effort is, at least in my opinion, close minded and pessimistic. Perhaps I am overly optimistic, and we all have our opinions, however it is not my place, regardless of my system, to say when someone is no longer salvageable. We do what we do to save lives, however we are not doctors and we are not qualified unless death is obvious. Decapitations, the onset of rigormortous (I think I spelled it right) etc are all causes to call it quits, but in this case I see no signs the patient is no longer salvageable. In this scenario we do not know what the cause of death was, or even the time it occurred. There is no way for us to make a sound judgment with the insufficient facts which are presented here, at least in my opinion.
No one understands more then I the fact that we lose patients; this is a fact of life, especially in our line of work. I have lost my fair share of people, including children, and no one despises it more the me. I do believe in miracles, and I have seen my fair share of patients recover from the depths of death. Numbers are all fine and dandy, but I do not believe statistics have a reputable role in our profession, at least in the cases where a survivability potential of a patient is i question. I can recall a child who fell into the Potomac River in VA years ago, was under the water for 40 minutes, and even with the technology of the day survived. There is no reason, in my estimation, this baby should not be worked on. I would not perform slow code on this child, it would be full speed. I do what I do because I believe in saving patients.
Wall have our opinions, and we all have our standards, but mine are personal to me. I am not saying someone who disagrees is wrong, merely that I disagree. I would much rather find a patient did not survive because it was their time then find I could have saved them but didn't do all I could for them. I sleep well at night, even after hte more horrific things I have seen over the years, because I know in my heart I did all I could. I have never had a person tell me I could have done more, and I have never had the nightmares that some of our brothers and sisters have had because I know in my heart I do all I can regardless of the outcome. I have a need to do everything in my power in order to maintain a certain level of sanity.
I had an instructor tell me once, after I told him the same thing, that I wouldn't last long in this profession unless I altered my attitude. That was 10 years ago, and I am still here practicing as I always have. I am not saying he was wrong, only that he misjudged me. I operate the way I do because this s the way God designed me. We are all different, and we all must do what we must do to feel secure in our judgments.