Swenson Aunika, Hyde Robert
Department of Emergency Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine Palo Alto California USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine Rochester Minnesota USA.
J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open. 2021 Mar 2;2(2):e12388. doi: 10.1002/emp2.12388. eCollection 2021 Apr.
Emergency departments (ED) are frequently the entryway to the health system for older, more ill patients. Because decisions made in the ED often influence escalation of care both in the ED and after admission, it is important for emergency physicians to understand their patients' goals of care.
To determine how well emergency physicians understand their patients' goals of care.
This was a prospective survey study of a convenience sample of ED patients 65 years and older presenting between February 18 and March 1, 2019 to an academic center with 77,000 annual visits. If a patient did not have decision-making capacity, a surrogate decision-maker was interviewed when possible. Two sets of surveys were designed, one for patients and one for physicians. The patient survey included questions regarding their goals of care and end-of-life care preferences. The physician survey asked physicians to select which goals of care were important to their patients and to identify which was the most important. Patient-physician agreement on patients' most important goal of care was analyzed with Cohen's kappa.
A total of 111 patient participants were invited to complete the survey, of whom 80 (72%) agreed to participate. The patients consisted of 43 women and 37 men with an age range from 65 to 98 years. Additionally, 16 attending and 14 resident physicians participated in the study for a total of 49 attending responses and 41 resident responses. A total of 88% of patients believed it was either very important or important to discuss goals of care with their physicians. Both patients and physicians most frequently chose "Improve or maintain function, quality of life, or independence" as the most important goal; however, there was wide variation in patient responses. Patients and attending physicians selected the same most important goal of care in 20% of cases (kappa 0.03) and patients and resident physicians selected the same goal in 27% of cases (kappa 0.11).
We found poor agreement between patients and physicians in the ED regarding patients' most important goal of care. Additionally, we found that most patients visiting the ED believe it is important to discuss goals of care with their physicians. Future work may focus on interventions to facilitate goals of care discussions in the ED.
急诊科常常是老年患者及病情较重患者进入医疗系统的入口。由于急诊科做出的决策往往会影响急诊科内及入院后的治疗升级,因此急诊医生了解患者的治疗目标非常重要。
确定急诊医生对患者治疗目标的理解程度。
这是一项前瞻性调查研究,对2019年2月18日至3月1日期间前往一家年就诊量达77000人次的学术中心就诊的65岁及以上急诊科患者的便利样本进行研究。如果患者没有决策能力,则尽可能采访替代决策者。设计了两组调查问卷,一组针对患者,一组针对医生。患者调查问卷包括有关其治疗目标和临终关怀偏好的问题。医生调查问卷要求医生选择哪些治疗目标对其患者很重要,并确定哪个是最重要的。使用科恩kappa系数分析患者与医生在患者最重要治疗目标上的一致性。
共邀请了111名患者参与调查,其中80名(72%)同意参与。患者包括43名女性和37名男性,年龄在65岁至98岁之间。此外,16名主治医师和14名住院医师参与了研究,共收到49份主治医师回复和41份住院医师回复。共有88%的患者认为与医生讨论治疗目标非常重要或重要。患者和医生最常选择“改善或维持功能、生活质量或独立性”作为最重要的目标;然而,患者的回答差异很大。患者和主治医师在20%的病例中选择了相同的最重要治疗目标(kappa系数为0.03),患者和住院医师在27%的病例中选择了相同的目标(kappa系数为0.11)。
我们发现急诊科患者与医生在患者最重要治疗目标上的一致性较差。此外,我们发现大多数前往急诊科就诊的患者认为与医生讨论治疗目标很重要。未来的工作可能侧重于采取干预措施,以促进急诊科内关于治疗目标的讨论。