Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
JAMA Intern Med. 2019 May 1;179(5):676-684. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2019.0027.
Little is known about whether clinicians and surrogate decision makers follow recommended strategies for shared decision making by incorporating intensive care unit (ICU) patients' values and preferences into treatment decisions.
To determine how often clinicians and surrogates exchange information about patients' previously expressed values and preferences and deliberate and plan treatment based on these factors during conferences about prognosis and goals of care for incapacitated ICU patients.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A secondary analysis of a prospective, multicenter cohort study of audiorecorded clinician-family conferences between surrogates and clinicians of 249 incapacitated, critically ill adults was conducted. The study was performed between October 8, 2009, and October 23, 2012. Data analysis was performed between July 2, 2014, and April 20, 2015. Patient eligibility criteria included lack of decision-making capacity, a diagnosis of acute respiratory distress syndrome, and predicted in-hospital mortality of 50% or more. In addition to the patients, 451 surrogates and 144 clinicians at 13 ICUs at 6 US academic and community medical centers were included.
Two coders analyzed transcripts of audiorecorded conversations for statements in which clinicians and surrogates exchanged information about patients' treatment preferences and health-related values and applied them in deliberation and treatment planning.
Of the 249 patients, 134 (54.9%) were men; mean (SD) age was 58.2 (16.5) years. Among the 244 conferences that addressed a decision about goals of care, 63 (25.8%; 95% CI, 20.3%-31.3%) contained no information exchange or deliberation about patients' values and preferences. Clinicians and surrogates exchanged information about patients' values and preferences in 167 (68.4%) (95% CI, 62.6%-74.3%) of the conferences and specifically deliberated about how the patients' values applied to the decision in 108 (44.3%; 95% CI, 38.0%-50.5%). Important end-of-life considerations, such as physical, cognitive, and social functioning or spirituality were each discussed in 87 (35.7%) or less of the conferences; surrogates provided a substituted judgment in 33 (13.5%); and clinicians made treatment recommendations based on patients' values and preferences in 20 conferences (8.2%).
Most clinician-family conferences about prognosis and goals of care for critically ill patients appear to lack important elements of communication about values and preferences, with robust deliberation being particularly deficient. Interventions may be needed to better prepare surrogates for these conversations and improve clinicians' communication skills for eliciting and incorporating patients' values and preferences into treatment decisions.
对于临床医生和替代决策人是否遵循建议的共享决策策略,将 ICU 患者的价值观和偏好纳入治疗决策,人们知之甚少。
确定在为无能力 ICU 患者进行预后和治疗目标会议期间,临床医生和代理人在多大程度上交流有关患者先前表达的价值观和偏好的信息,并根据这些因素进行审议和计划治疗。
设计、地点和参与者:对 249 名患有急性呼吸窘迫综合征且无能力的重症成人的代理人和临床医生之间的音频记录临床医生-家庭会议进行了前瞻性、多中心队列研究的二次分析。该研究于 2009 年 10 月 8 日至 2012 年 10 月 23 日进行。数据分析于 2014 年 7 月 2 日至 2015 年 4 月 20 日进行。患者入选标准包括决策能力丧失、急性呼吸窘迫综合征的诊断以及预测院内死亡率为 50%或更高。除患者外,还包括 6 家美国学术和社区医疗中心的 13 家 ICU 中的 451 名代理人和 144 名临床医生。
两名编码员分析了音频记录对话的记录,以确定临床医生和代理人是否交流了有关患者治疗偏好和与健康相关的价值观的信息,并将其应用于审议和治疗计划中。
在 249 名患者中,有 134 名(54.9%)为男性;平均(SD)年龄为 58.2(16.5)岁。在 244 次涉及治疗目标决策的会议中,有 63 次(25.8%;95%CI,20.3%-31.3%)会议中没有交流或审议患者的价值观和偏好。在 167 次(68.4%)(95%CI,62.6%-74.3%)会议中,临床医生和代理人交流了有关患者价值观和偏好的信息,在 108 次(44.3%)会议中具体审议了患者的价值观如何适用于决策。重要的临终考虑因素,如身体、认知和社会功能或精神信仰,在 87 次(35.7%)或更少的会议中进行了讨论;代理人提供了替代判断 33 次(13.5%);临床医生根据患者的价值观和偏好做出了 20 次治疗建议(8.2%)。
对于危重患者的预后和治疗目标会议,大多数临床医生-家属会议似乎都缺乏关于价值观和偏好的重要沟通要素,尤其是审议严重不足。可能需要进行干预,以更好地为代理人做好这些对话的准备,并提高临床医生在征求和纳入患者价值观和偏好方面的沟通技巧,以做出治疗决策。