Clair Catherine A, Abshire Saylor Martha, Nolan Marie T, Gallo Joseph J
Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Palliat Support Care. 2023 Apr;21(2):277-282. doi: 10.1017/S1478951522001031.
Some observers have proposed that physicians may die differently compared with the average patient. Semi-structured interviews with family members of physicians who died offer an opportunity to better understand how patient preferences and wishes are perceived and acted on by family members at the end of life. The decision-making experiences of these family members for a loved one who was a physician may have implications for the lay person at end of life.
The Johns Hopkins Precursors Study includes individuals who matriculated into the graduating classes of 1948 to 1964 of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. From this cohort, we interviewed 26 family members of physicians who died. Interviews were coded and analyzed using a comparative, iterative process.
We found that family members of physicians who died described the uncertainty at end of life. This overarching theme was organized into the following: (a) the certainty of uncertainty; (b) the preparation for uncertainty; and (c) brokering of decisions in the face of uncertainty. Despite careful end-of-life preparation by well-informed physicians, family members were still left to broker decisions as they navigated the wishes of the physician and what the family and medical care team believed to be in the best interest of the physician.
Our findings suggest that our family members were not immune to uncertainty. The clinical momentum at the end of life may contribute to challenges faced by patients and family members when brokering decisions. Normalizing uncertainty in medical training and for families may aid in addressing the stress of uncertainty at end of life.
一些观察家提出,医生的死亡方式可能与普通患者不同。对去世医生的家属进行半结构化访谈,为更好地了解患者的偏好和愿望在生命末期如何被家属理解并付诸行动提供了契机。这些家属为身为医生的亲人做决策的经历,可能会对普通民众在生命末期的情况产生影响。
约翰·霍普金斯先驱者研究涵盖了约翰·霍普金斯大学医学院1948年至1964年毕业班级的学生。从这个队列中,我们采访了26位去世医生的家属。访谈采用比较、迭代的过程进行编码和分析。
我们发现,去世医生的家属描述了生命末期的不确定性。这个总体主题被归纳为以下几点:(a)不确定性的确定性;(b)对不确定性的准备;(c)面对不确定性时的决策协调。尽管知识渊博的医生进行了精心的临终准备,但在家属权衡医生的愿望以及家属和医疗团队认为对医生最有利的事情时,他们仍然需要进行决策协调。
我们的研究结果表明,我们的家属也无法避免不确定性。生命末期的临床发展态势可能会给患者和家属在决策协调时带来挑战。在医学培训中以及让家庭了解不确定性的常态化,可能有助于缓解生命末期不确定性带来的压力