Institute for Experimental Medicine, Medical Ethics, Kiel University, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Arnold-Heller-Str. 3, Haus 28 (Gebäude Rechtsmedizin), 24105, Kiel, Germany.
Neurological Center, Segeberger Kliniken, Hamdorfer Weg 3, 23795, Bad Segeberg, Germany.
Neurocrit Care. 2019 Aug;31(1):125-134. doi: 10.1007/s12028-018-0661-2.
Outcome predictions in patients with acute severe neurologic disorders are difficult and influenced by multiple factors. Since the decision for and the extent of life-sustaining therapies are based on the estimated prognosis, it is vital to understand which factors influence such estimates. This study examined whether previous professional experience with rehabilitation medicine influences physician decision-making.
A case vignette presenting a typical patient with an extensive brain stem infarction was developed and distributed online to clinical neurologists. Questions focused on prognosis, interpretation of an advanced directive, whether to withdraw life-sustaining treatments and information on prior rehabilitation experience from the survey respondent.
Of the participating neurologists, 77% opted for the withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies (n = 70; response rate: 14.8%). This decision was not affected by age, gender, or length of clinical experience. Neurologists with experience in rehabilitation medicine tended to estimate a more positive prognosis than neurologists without, but this result was not significant (p = .13). There was an association between the intervention chosen and previous experience in rehabilitation; neurologists with experience in rehabilitation medicine opted significantly more often (31.8%) for continuing life-sustaining treatments than neurologists without such experience (8.7%, p = .04).
Our results indicate that there are subjective factors influencing decisions to limit life-sustaining treatments that are based on previous professional experience. This finding emphasizes the variability and cognitive bias of such decision processes and should be integrated into future guidelines for specialist training on end-of-life decision-making.
急性严重神经疾病患者的预后预测较为困难,受多种因素影响。由于维持生命治疗的决策和范围是基于估计的预后,因此了解哪些因素会影响这些预测至关重要。本研究探讨了康复医学方面的既往专业经验是否会影响医生的决策。
开发了一个呈现广泛脑干梗死典型患者的病例描述,并在线分发给临床神经科医生。问题集中在预后、对高级指令的解释、是否停止维持生命的治疗以及调查对象的康复经验信息上。
参与研究的神经科医生中,77%(n=70;应答率:14.8%)选择停止维持生命的治疗。这一决定不受年龄、性别或临床经验长短的影响。有康复医学经验的神经科医生比没有经验的神经科医生更倾向于估计更积极的预后,但这一结果没有统计学意义(p=0.13)。所选择的干预措施与康复方面的既往经验之间存在关联;有康复医学经验的神经科医生明显更倾向于继续维持生命的治疗(31.8%),而没有此类经验的神经科医生则更倾向于停止治疗(8.7%,p=0.04)。
我们的结果表明,存在影响限制维持生命治疗决策的主观因素,这些决策是基于既往的专业经验。这一发现强调了此类决策过程的可变性和认知偏差,应将其纳入未来关于临终决策的专家培训指南中。