Wall Jessica, Hiestand Brian, Caterino Jeffrey
Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Wake Forest School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
West J Emerg Med. 2015 Dec;16(7):966-73. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2015.8.25657. Epub 2015 Nov 16.
We conducted an epidemiologic evaluation of advance directives and do-not-resuscitate (DNR) prevalence among residents of extended care facilities (ECF) presenting to the emergency department (ED).
We performed a retrospective medical record review on ED patients originating from an ECF. Data were collected on age, sex, race, triage acuity, ED disposition, DNR status, power-of attorney (POA) status, and living will (LW) status. We generated descriptive statistics, and used logistic regression to evaluate predictors of DNR status.
A total of 754 patients over 20 months met inclusion criteria; 533 (70.7%) were white, 351 (46.6%) were male, and the median age was 66 years (IQR 54-78). DNR orders were found in 124 (16.4%, 95% CI [13.9-19.1%]) patients. In univariate analysis, there was a significant difference in DNR by gender (10.5% female vs. 6.0% male with DNR, p=0.013), race (13.4% white vs. 3.1% non-white with DNR, p=0.005), and age (4.0% <65 years; 2.9% 65-74 years, p=0.101; 3.3% 75-84 years, p=0.001; 6.2% >84 years, p<0.001). Using multivariate logistic regression, we found that factors associated with DNR status were gender (OR 1.477, p=0.358, note interaction term), POA status (OR 6.612, p<0.001), LW (18.032, p<0.001), age (65-74 years OR 1.261, p=0.478; 75-84 years OR 1.737, p=0.091, >84 years OR 5.258, P<0.001), with interactions between POA and gender (OR 0.294, P=0.016) and between POA and LW (OR 0.227, p<0.005). Secondary analysis demonstrated that DNR orders were not significantly associated with death during admission (p=0.084).
Age, gender, POA, and LW use are predictors of ECF patient DNR use. Further, DNR presence is not a predictor of death in the hospital.
我们对前往急诊科(ED)就诊的长期护理机构(ECF)居民的预立医疗指示和不进行心肺复苏(DNR)的患病率进行了流行病学评估。
我们对来自ECF的ED患者进行了回顾性病历审查。收集了年龄、性别、种族、分诊 acuity、ED处置、DNR状态、授权委托书(POA)状态和生前遗嘱(LW)状态的数据。我们生成了描述性统计数据,并使用逻辑回归来评估DNR状态的预测因素。
在20个月内共有754名患者符合纳入标准;533名(70.7%)为白人,351名(46.6%)为男性,中位年龄为66岁(四分位间距54 - 78岁)。在124名(16.4%,95%可信区间[13.9 - 19.1%])患者中发现了DNR医嘱。在单因素分析中,DNR在性别(女性10.5% vs. 男性6.0%有DNR,p = 0.013)、种族(白人13.4% vs. 非白人3.1%有DNR,p = 0.005)和年龄方面存在显著差异(<65岁4.0%;65 - 74岁2.9%,p = 0.101;75 - 84岁3.3%,p = 0.001;>84岁6.2%,p < 0.001)。使用多因素逻辑回归,我们发现与DNR状态相关的因素是性别(比值比1.477,p = 0.358,注意交互项)、POA状态(比值比6.612,p < 0.001)、LW(18.032,p < 0.001)、年龄(65 - 74岁比值比1.261,p = 0.478;75 - 84岁比值比1.737,p = 0.091,>84岁比值比5.258,P < 0.001),以及POA与性别之间的交互作用(比值比0.294,P = 0.016)和POA与LW之间的交互作用(比值比0.227,p < 0.005)。二次分析表明,DNR医嘱与住院期间死亡无显著关联(p = 0.084)。
年龄、性别、POA和LW的使用是ECF患者DNR使用的预测因素。此外,DNR的存在不是医院死亡的预测因素。