Cape David, Fox-Robichaud Alison, Turgeon Alexis F, Seely Andrew, Hall Richard, Burns Karen, Singal Rohit K, Dodek Peter, Bagshaw Sean, Sibbald Robert, Downar James
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
J Med Ethics. 2016 Mar;42(3):180-5. doi: 10.1136/medethics-2015-102856. Epub 2015 Nov 30.
In a landmark 2013 decision, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) ruled that the withdrawal of life support in certain circumstances is a treatment requiring patient or substitute decision maker (SDM) consent. How intensive care unit (ICU) physicians perceive this ruling is unknown.
To determine physician knowledge of and attitudes towards the SCC decision, as well as the self-reported changes in practice attributed to the decision.
We surveyed intensivists at university hospitals across Canada. We used a knowledge test and Likert-scale questions to measure respondent knowledge of and attitudes towards the ruling. We used vignettes to assess decision making in cases of intractable physician-SDM conflict over the management of patients with very poor prognoses. We compared management choices pre-SCC decision versus post-SCC decision versus the subjective, respondent-defined most appropriate choice. Responses were compared across predefined subgroups. We performed qualitative analysis on free-text responses.
We received 82 responses (response rate=42%). Respondents reported providing high levels of self-defined inappropriate treatment. Although most respondents reported no change in practice, there was a significant overall shift towards higher intensity and less subjectively appropriate management after the SCC decision. Attitudes to the SCC decision and approaches to disputes over end-of-life (EoL) care in the ICU were highly variable. There were no significant differences among predefined subgroups.
Many Canadian ICU physicians report providing a higher intensity of treatment, and less subjectively appropriate treatment, in situations of dispute over EoL care after the Supreme Court of Canada's ruling in Cuthbertson versus Rasouli.
在2013年具有里程碑意义的一项裁决中,加拿大最高法院(SCC)判定,在某些情况下撤除生命维持治疗属于一种需要患者或替代决策者(SDM)同意的治疗方式。重症监护病房(ICU)医生如何看待这一裁决尚不清楚。
确定医生对加拿大最高法院裁决的了解程度和态度,以及他们自我报告的因该裁决而在实践中发生的变化。
我们对加拿大各大学医院的重症监护医生进行了调查。我们使用知识测试和李克特量表问题来衡量受访者对该裁决的了解程度和态度。我们使用案例 vignettes 来评估在对预后极差的患者管理方面医生与替代决策者之间存在棘手冲突的情况下的决策制定。我们比较了加拿大最高法院裁决前、裁决后的管理选择以及受访者主观定义的最合适选择。我们在预先定义的亚组之间比较了回答。我们对自由文本回答进行了定性分析。
我们收到了82份回复(回复率 = 42%)。受访者报告提供了高水平的自我定义的不适当治疗。尽管大多数受访者报告实践中没有变化,但在加拿大最高法院裁决后,总体上有显著转变,朝着更高强度且主观上不太合适的管理方向发展。对加拿大最高法院裁决的态度以及ICU中关于临终(EoL)护理纠纷的处理方法差异很大。预先定义的亚组之间没有显著差异。
许多加拿大ICU医生报告称,在加拿大最高法院对卡斯伯特森诉拉苏利案做出裁决后,在临终护理纠纷的情况下,他们提供了更高强度的治疗,且主观上不太合适的治疗。