Kaldjian L C, Erekson Z D, Haberle T H, Curtis A E, Shinkunas L A, Cannon K T, Forman-Hoffman V L
Department of Internal Medicine, 1-106 MEB, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, 500 Newton Road, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA.
J Med Ethics. 2009 Jun;35(6):338-42. doi: 10.1136/jme.2008.027854.
Code status discussions may fail to address patients' treatment-related goals and their knowledge of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). This study aimed to investigate patients' resuscitation preferences, knowledge of CPR and goals of care. Design, setting, patients and measurements: 135 adults were interviewed within 48 h of admission to a general medical service in an academic medical centre, querying code status preferences, knowledge about CPR and its outcome probabilities and goals of care. Medical records were reviewed for clinical information and code status documentation.
41 (30.4%) patients had discussed CPR with their doctor, 116 (85.9%) patients preferred full code status and 11 (8.1%) patients expressed code status preferences different from the code status documented in their medical record. When queried about seven possible goals of care, patients affirmed an average of 4.9 goals; their single most important goals were broadly distributed, ranging from being cured (n = 36; 26.7%) to being comfortable (n = 8; 5.9%). Patients' mean estimate of survival to discharge after CPR was 60.4%. Most patients believed it was helpful to discuss goals of care (n = 95; 70.4%) and the chances of surviving in hospital CPR (n = 112; 83.0%). Some patients expressed a desire to change their code status after receiving information about survival following in hospital CPR (n = 11; 8.1%) or after discussing goals of care (n = 2; 1.5%).
Doctors need to address patients' knowledge about CPR and take steps to avoid discrepancies between treatment orders and patients' preferences. Addressing CPR outcome probabilities and goals of care during code status discussions may improve patients' knowledge and influence their preferences.
关于医疗指令状态的讨论可能无法涉及患者的治疗相关目标及其对心肺复苏(CPR)的了解。本研究旨在调查患者的复苏偏好、对CPR的了解以及护理目标。设计、地点、患者与测量方法:在一所学术医疗中心,对135名成年患者在入住普通内科服务的48小时内进行访谈,询问其医疗指令状态偏好、对CPR及其结果概率的了解以及护理目标。查阅病历以获取临床信息和医疗指令状态记录。
41名(30.4%)患者曾与医生讨论过CPR,116名(85.9%)患者倾向于完全急救状态,11名(8.1%)患者表达的医疗指令状态偏好与病历中记录的不同。当被问及七个可能的护理目标时,患者平均认可4.9个目标;他们最重要的单一目标分布广泛,从治愈(n = 36;26.7%)到舒适(n = 8;5.9%)。患者对CPR后出院存活的平均估计为60.4%。大多数患者认为讨论护理目标(n = 95;70.4%)以及在医院进行CPR时存活的几率(n = 112;83.0%)是有帮助的。一些患者在收到关于医院CPR后存活的信息后(n = 11;8.1%)或在讨论护理目标后(n = 2;1.5%)表示希望改变其医疗指令状态。
医生需要了解患者对CPR的了解情况,并采取措施避免治疗医嘱与患者偏好之间出现差异。在医疗指令状态讨论中提及CPR结果概率和护理目标可能会提高患者的认识并影响他们的偏好。