Kryworuchko Jennifer, Strachan P H, Nouvet E, Downar J, You J J
Nursing and Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, University of British Columbia, and Research Scientist, British Columbia Centre for Palliative Care, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2016 May 23;6(5):e010451. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010451.
We aimed to identify factors influencing communication and decision-making, and to learn how physicians and nurses view their roles in deciding about the use of life-sustaining technology for seriously ill hospitalised patients and their families.
The qualitative study used Flanagan's critical incident technique to guide interpretive description of open-ended in-depth individual interviews.
Participants were recruited from the medical wards at 3 Canadian hospitals.
Interviews were completed with 30 healthcare professionals (9 staff physicians, 9 residents and 12 nurses; aged 25-63 years; 73% female) involved in decisions about the care of seriously ill hospitalised patients and their families.
Participants described encounters with patients and families in which communication and decision-making about life-sustaining technology went particularly well and unwell (ie, critical incidents). We further explored their roles, context and challenges. Analysis proceeded using constant comparative methods to form themes independently and with the interprofessional research team.
We identified several key factors that influenced communication and decision-making about life-sustaining technology. The overarching factor was how those involved in such communication and decision-making (healthcare providers, patients and families) conceptualised the goals of medical practice. Additional key factors related to how preferences and decision-making were shaped through relationships, particularly how people worked toward 'making sense of the situation', how physicians and nurses approached the inherent and systemic tensions in achieving consensus with families, and how physicians and nurses conducted professional work within teams. Participants described incidents in which these key factors interacted in dynamic and unpredictable ways to influence decision-making for any particular patient and family.
A focus on more meaningful and productive dialogue with patients and families by (and between) each member of the healthcare team may improve decisions about life-sustaining technology. Work is needed to acknowledge and support the non-curative role of healthcare and build capacity for the interprofessional team to engage in effective decision-making discussions.
我们旨在确定影响沟通与决策的因素,并了解医生和护士如何看待他们在为住院重症患者及其家属决定是否使用维持生命技术方面所扮演的角色。
这项定性研究采用弗拉纳根关键事件技术来指导对开放式深度个人访谈的解释性描述。
参与者从加拿大3家医院的内科病房招募。
对30名参与住院重症患者及其家属护理决策的医疗保健专业人员(9名在职医生、9名住院医生和12名护士;年龄在25至63岁之间;73%为女性)进行了访谈。
参与者描述了与患者及其家属的接触经历,其中关于维持生命技术的沟通和决策进展特别顺利和不顺利的情况(即关键事件)。我们进一步探讨了他们的角色、背景和挑战。采用持续比较法进行分析,以独立并与跨专业研究团队共同形成主题。
我们确定了几个影响维持生命技术沟通与决策的关键因素。首要因素是参与此类沟通和决策的人员(医疗保健提供者、患者和家属)如何将医疗实践的目标概念化。其他关键因素涉及偏好和决策如何通过关系形成,特别是人们如何努力“理解情况”,医生和护士如何应对在与家属达成共识方面固有的和系统性的紧张关系,以及医生和护士如何在团队中开展专业工作。参与者描述了这些关键因素以动态且不可预测的方式相互作用,从而影响任何特定患者和家属决策的事件。
医疗团队的每个成员(以及成员之间)专注于与患者及其家属进行更有意义和富有成效的对话,可能会改善关于维持生命技术的决策。需要开展工作来认识和支持医疗保健的非治愈性作用,并增强跨专业团队进行有效决策讨论的能力。