Palliative and Supportive Care Service, Chair of Geriatric Palliative Care, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Service of Geriatrics and Geriatric Rehabilitation, Chair of Geriatric Palliative Care, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Health Expect. 2021 Jun;24(3):790-799. doi: 10.1111/hex.13212. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
Discussing patient preferences for cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is routine in hospital admission for older people. The way the conversation is conducted plays an important role for patient comprehension and the ethics of decision making.
The objective was to examine how CPR is explained in geriatric rehabilitation hospital admission interviews, focussing on circumstances in which physicians explain CPR and the content of these explanations.
We recorded forty-three physician-patient admission interviews taking place in a hospital in French-speaking Switzerland, during which CPR was discussed. Data were analysed in French with thematic and conversation analysis, and the extracts used for publication were translated into English.
Mean patient age was 83.7 years; 53.5% were admitted for rehabilitation after surgery or traumatism. CPR was explained in 53.8% of the conversations. Most explanations were brief and concerned the technical procedures, mentioning only rarely potential outcome. With one exception, medical indication and prognosis of CPR did not feature in these explanations. Explanations occurred either before the patient's answer (as part of the question about CPR preferences) or after the patient's answer, generated by patients' indecision, misunderstanding and by the need to clarify answers.
The scarcity and simplicity of CPR explanations highlight a reluctance to have in-depth discussions and reflect the assumption that CPR does not need explaining. Providing patients with accurate information about the outcomes and risks of CPR is incremental for reaching informed decisions and patient-centred care.
Patients were involved in the data collection stage of the study.
在为老年人办理住院手续时,通常会讨论他们对心肺复苏术(CPR)的偏好。对话的进行方式对患者的理解和决策伦理起着重要作用。
本研究旨在探讨心肺复苏术在老年康复医院入院访谈中是如何被解释的,重点关注医生解释心肺复苏术的情况以及这些解释的内容。
我们记录了在瑞士法语区的一家医院进行的 43 次医患入院访谈,其中讨论了心肺复苏术。数据用法语进行了主题和会话分析,用于发表的摘录被翻译成了英语。
患者的平均年龄为 83.7 岁;53.5%是因手术或创伤后康复而入院。53.8%的谈话中解释了心肺复苏术。大多数解释都很简短,涉及技术程序,很少提到潜在的结果。除了一个例外,心肺复苏术的医学指征和预后在这些解释中都没有出现。解释要么发生在患者回答之前(作为心肺复苏术偏好问题的一部分),要么发生在患者回答之后,是由患者的犹豫不决、误解以及澄清回答的需要所产生的。
心肺复苏术解释的稀缺性和简单性突出了不愿进行深入讨论的倾向,反映了心肺复苏术不需要解释的假设。为患者提供关于心肺复苏术结果和风险的准确信息,对于做出知情决策和以患者为中心的护理至关重要。
患者参与了研究的数据收集阶段。