Department of Medicine, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York, USA.
School of Nursing, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA.
J Palliat Med. 2022 Oct;25(10):1501-1509. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2021.0631. Epub 2022 Apr 1.
Conflict between clinicians is prevalent within intensive care units (ICUs) and may hinder optimal delivery of care. However, little is known about the sources of interpersonal conflict and how it manifests within the context of palliative and end-of-life care delivery in ICUs. To characterize interpersonal conflict in the delivery of palliative care within ICUs. Secondary thematic analysis using a deductive-inductive approach. We analyzed existing qualitative data that conducted semistructured interviews to examine factors associated with variable adoption of specialty palliative care in ICUs. In the parent study, 36 participants were recruited from two urban academic medical centers in the United States, including ICU attendings ( = 17), ICU nurses ( = 11), ICU social workers ( = 1), and palliative care providers ( = 7). Coders applied an existing framework of interpersonal conflict to guide initial coding and analysis, combined with a flexible inductive approach allowing new codes to emerge. We characterized three properties of interpersonal conflict: disagreement, interference, and negative emotion. In the context of delivering palliative and end-of-life care for critically ill patients, "disagreement" centered around whether patients were appropriate for palliative care, which care plans should be prioritized, and how care should be delivered. "Interference" involved preventing palliative care consultation or goals-of-care discussions and hindering patient care. "Negative emotion" included occurrences of silencing or scolding, rudeness, anger, regret, ethical conflict, and grief. Our findings provide an in-depth understanding of interpersonal conflict within palliative and end-of-life care for critically ill patients. Further study is needed to understand how to prevent and resolve such conflicts.
在重症监护病房(ICU)中,临床医生之间的冲突很普遍,可能会阻碍最佳的护理提供。然而,人们对人际冲突的来源以及它在 ICU 临终关怀和生命末期护理中的表现知之甚少。 描述 ICU 临终关怀中人际冲突的特征。 采用演绎-归纳法的二次主题分析。我们分析了现有的定性数据,这些数据进行了半结构化访谈,以研究与 ICU 中专业临终关怀的不同采用相关的因素。 在母研究中,从美国的两个城市学术医疗中心招募了 36 名参与者,包括 ICU 主治医生( = 17)、ICU 护士( = 11)、ICU 社会工作者( = 1)和姑息治疗提供者( = 7)。 编码员应用现有的人际冲突框架来指导初始编码和分析,同时采用灵活的归纳方法允许出现新的代码。 我们描述了人际冲突的三个特性:分歧、干扰和负面情绪。在为危重病患者提供姑息治疗和临终关怀的背景下,“分歧”集中在患者是否适合姑息治疗、应该优先考虑哪些护理计划以及应该如何提供护理上。“干扰”涉及阻止姑息治疗咨询或目标治疗讨论以及阻碍患者护理。“负面情绪”包括沉默或责骂、粗鲁、愤怒、遗憾、伦理冲突和悲伤的发生。 我们的研究结果深入了解了危重病患者姑息治疗和临终关怀中的人际冲突。需要进一步研究如何预防和解决此类冲突。