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国家和文化对受伤患者临终关怀的影响:一项国际调查的结果

The impact of country and culture on end-of-life care for injured patients: results from an international survey.

作者信息

Ball Chad G, Navsaria Pradeep, Kirkpatrick Andrew W, Vercler Christian, Dixon Elijah, Zink John, Laupland Kevin B, Lowe Michael, Salomone Jeffrey P, Dente Christopher J, Wyrzykowski Amy D, Hameed S Morad, Widder Sandy, Inaba Kenji, Ball Jill E, Rozycki Grace S, Montgomery Sean P, Hayward Thomas, Feliciano David V

机构信息

Department of Surgery, Emory University, Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.

出版信息

J Trauma. 2010 Dec;69(6):1323-33; discussion 1333-4. doi: 10.1097/TA.0b013e3181f66878.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Up to 20% of all trauma patients admitted to an intensive care unit die from their injuries. End-of-life decision making is a variable process that involves prognosis, predicted functional outcomes, personal beliefs, institutional resources, societal norms, and clinician experience. The goal of this study was to better understand end-of-life processes after major injury by comparing clinician viewpoints from various countries and cultures.

METHODS

A clinician-based, 38-question international survey was used to characterize the impacts of medical, religious, social, and system factors on end-of-life care after trauma.

RESULTS

A total of 419 clinicians from the United States (49%), Canada (19%), South Africa (11%), Europe (9%), Asia (8%), and Australasia (4%) completed the survey. In America, the admitting surgeon guided most end-of-life decisions (51%), when compared with all other countries (0-27%). The practice structure of American respondents also varied from other regions. Formal medical futility laws are rarely available (14-38%). Ethical consultation services are often accessible (29-98%), but rarely used (0-29%), and typically unhelpful (<30%). End-of-life decision making for patients with traumatic brain injuries varied extensively across regions with regard to the impact of patient age, Glasgow Coma Scale score, and clinician philosophy. Similar differences were observed for spinal cord injuries (age and functional level). The availability and use of "donation after cardiac death" also varied substantially between countries.

CONCLUSIONS

In this unique study, geographic differences in religion, practice composition, decision-maker viewpoint, and institutional resources resulted in significant variation in end-of-life care after injury. These disparities reflect competing concepts (patient autonomy, distributive justice, and religion).

摘要

背景

入住重症监护病房的所有创伤患者中,高达20%会因伤死亡。临终决策是一个多变的过程,涉及预后、预测的功能结局、个人信仰、机构资源、社会规范和临床医生经验。本研究的目的是通过比较不同国家和文化背景的临床医生观点,更好地了解重伤后的临终过程。

方法

采用一项基于临床医生的、包含38个问题的国际调查,以描述医疗、宗教、社会和系统因素对创伤后临终护理的影响。

结果

共有来自美国(49%)、加拿大(19%)、南非(11%)、欧洲(9%)、亚洲(8%)和澳大拉西亚(4%)的419名临床医生完成了调查。在美国,与所有其他国家(0 - 27%)相比,收治的外科医生主导了大多数临终决策(51%)。美国受访者的执业结构也与其他地区不同。正式的医疗无效法律很少见(14 - 38%)。伦理咨询服务通常可获得(29 - 98%),但很少被使用(0 - 29%),且通常没有帮助(<30%)。对于创伤性脑损伤患者,临终决策在不同地区因患者年龄、格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分和临床医生理念的影响而有很大差异。脊髓损伤(年龄和功能水平)也观察到类似差异。各国之间“心脏死亡后捐赠”的可用性和使用情况也有很大差异。

结论

在这项独特的研究中,宗教、执业构成、决策者观点和机构资源的地域差异导致受伤后临终护理存在显著差异。这些差异反映了相互竞争的概念(患者自主权、分配正义和宗教)。

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