Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep, and Occupational Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, 46202, USA.
Fairbanks Center for Medical Ethics, Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2017 Dec;32(12):1285-1293. doi: 10.1007/s11606-017-4158-z. Epub 2017 Aug 24.
Many hospitalized adults do not have the capacity to make their own health care decisions and thus require a surrogate decision-maker. While the ethical standard suggests that decisions should focus on a patient's preferences, our study explores the principles that surrogates consider most important when making decisions for older hospitalized patients.
We sought to determine how frequently surrogate decision-makers prioritized patient preferences in decision-making and what factors may predict their doing so.
We performed a secondary data analysis of a study conducted at three local hospitals that surveyed surrogate decision-makers for hospitalized patients 65 years of age and older.
Surrogates rated the importance of 16 decision-making principles and selected the one that was most important. We divided the surrogates into two groups: those who prioritized patient preferences and those who prioritized patient well-being. We analyzed the two groups for differences in knowledge of patient preferences, presence of advance directives, and psychological outcomes.
A total of 362 surrogates rated an average of six principles as being extremely important in decision-making; 77.8% of surrogates selected a patient well-being principle as the most important, whereas only 21.1% selected a patient preferences principle. Advance directives were more common to the patient preferences group than the patient well-being group (61.3% vs. 44.9%; 95% CI: 1.01-3.18; p = 0.04), whereas having conversations with the patient about their health care preferences was not a significant predictor of surrogate group identity (81.3% vs. 67.4%; 95% CI: 0.39-1.14; p = 0.14). We found no differences between the two groups regarding surrogate anxiety, depression, or decisional conflict.
While surrogates considered many factors, they focused more often on patient well-being than on patient preferences, in contravention of our current ethical framework. Surrogates more commonly prioritized patient preferences if they had advance directives available to them.
许多住院的成年人没有能力做出自己的医疗决策,因此需要指定一名代理人来做出决策。虽然伦理标准建议决策应关注患者的偏好,但我们的研究探讨了代理人在为老年住院患者做出决策时认为最重要的原则。
我们旨在确定代理人在决策中优先考虑患者偏好的频率,以及哪些因素可能预测他们这样做。
我们对在三家当地医院进行的一项研究进行了二次数据分析,该研究调查了 65 岁及以上住院患者的代理人。
代理人对 16 项决策原则的重要性进行了评分,并选择了最重要的一项。我们将代理人分为两组:优先考虑患者偏好的组和优先考虑患者福祉的组。我们分析了这两组在患者偏好知识、预先存在的指示和心理结果方面的差异。
共有 362 名代理人对平均 6 项原则的重要性进行了评分,认为在决策中极其重要;77.8%的代理人选择患者福祉原则为最重要的原则,而只有 21.1%的代理人选择患者偏好原则。与患者福祉组相比,患者偏好组的预先指示更为常见(61.3%比 44.9%;95%置信区间:1.01-3.18;p=0.04),而与患者就其医疗保健偏好进行对话并不是代理人组身份的显著预测因素(81.3%比 67.4%;95%置信区间:0.39-1.14;p=0.14)。我们没有发现两组之间在代理人焦虑、抑郁或决策冲突方面存在差异。
尽管代理人考虑了许多因素,但他们更关注患者的福祉而不是患者的偏好,这与我们当前的伦理框架相悖。如果代理人有可用的预先指示,他们更有可能优先考虑患者的偏好。