Srebnik Debra S, Russo Joan
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Box 359911, 325 9th Ave., Seattle, WA 98104, USA.
Psychiatr Serv. 2007 Sep;58(9):1157-63. doi: 10.1176/ps.2007.58.9.1157.
Psychiatric advance directives document clients' treatment preferences in advance of periods of diminished capacity for decision making. This article presents the first empirical data regarding rates and predictors of whether crisis care is consistent with psychiatric advance directives.
Participants were 106 community mental health outpatients who had completed a directive. Participants' mental health services were examined over a two-year period with interviews and chart reviews to determine whether clinical interventions were consistent with directive instructions.
Across 90 crisis events in which an advance directive was accessed, the average rate of care consistent with directive instructions was 67%. Instructions regarding medications, preemergency interventions, nonhospital alternatives, and most nontreatment personal care issues were consistent with care in nearly all cases. Somewhat less consistent with care were instructions to contact a surrogate decision maker and preferences among hospitals; between hospitals and hospital alternatives; and among seclusion, restraint, and sedating medication. Clients with fewer prior outpatient commitment orders and who had a surrogate decision maker who accessed the directive were more likely to have care consistent with directive instructions. The most commonly reported reason for overriding directive instructions was clinical need.
Overall, crisis care was largely consistent with directive instructions. To increase the likelihood of consistency, clients would be well advised to appoint a surrogate decision maker, particularly one who could be actively involved during crises. Encouraging creation and use of directives could be viewed as a positive step in the process of recovery and as an additional method of communicating client preferences during psychiatric crises.
精神科预先指示记录了患者在决策能力下降之前的治疗偏好。本文首次给出了关于危机护理是否符合精神科预先指示的发生率及预测因素的实证数据。
研究对象为106名完成了预先指示的社区心理健康门诊患者。通过访谈和病历审查,对患者两年内的心理健康服务进行检查,以确定临床干预措施是否符合预先指示的要求。
在查阅预先指示的90起危机事件中,符合指示要求的护理平均发生率为67%。关于药物治疗、紧急情况前干预、非住院替代方案以及大多数非治疗性个人护理问题的指示,在几乎所有情况下都与护理一致。与护理的一致性稍低的指示包括联系替代决策者以及医院之间的偏好;医院与医院替代方案之间;以及隔离、约束和镇静药物之间。之前门诊强制治疗令较少且有替代决策者查阅预先指示的患者,其护理更有可能符合指示要求。最常报告的违背指示要求的原因是临床需要。
总体而言,危机护理在很大程度上符合指示要求。为了提高一致性的可能性,建议患者指定一名替代决策者,尤其是在危机期间能够积极参与的人。鼓励制定和使用预先指示可被视为康复过程中的积极一步,也是在精神科危机期间传达患者偏好的另一种方式。