Geen Olivia, Gui Shannon, Andreychuk Sandra, DeBono Tony, Yousuf Haroon
Division of Geriatric Medicine, Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON.
Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON.
Can Geriatr J. 2022 Dec 1;25(4):324-327. doi: 10.5770/cgj.25.575. eCollection 2022 Dec.
Patients who wander as one of their psychological and behavioural symptoms of dementia are often unable to follow or recall Infection Prevention and Control precautions, putting them at risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19. Physical and chemical restraints have been used to limit the risk of transmission to wandering patients and their care providers, but restraints are not the standard of care for wandering behaviour in non-pandemic scenarios. Although provincial policies on restraint use are available, their guidance may not provide the context-dependent information necessary for individual patient decisions. To address this knowledge gap, we reviewed the medical, ethical, and legal considerations through an interdisciplinary approach including nurses, physicians, ethicists, hospital leadership, risk management, and legal counsel. We present an ethical framework that front-line health-care workers can use to create a balanced patient-centred care plan for incapable wandering patients who are at risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19.
作为痴呆症心理和行为症状之一而出现游荡行为的患者,往往无法遵循或回忆起感染预防与控制措施,这使他们面临感染或传播新冠病毒的风险。物理和化学约束措施已被用于降低游荡患者及其护理人员的传播风险,但在非疫情情况下,约束措施并非处理游荡行为的标准护理方式。尽管有关于约束措施使用的省级政策,但这些政策的指导可能无法提供针对个别患者决策所需的具体情境信息。为填补这一知识空白,我们通过跨学科方法进行了审查,参与人员包括护士、医生、伦理学家、医院领导、风险管理专家和法律顾问,涵盖医学、伦理和法律方面的考量因素。我们提出了一个伦理框架,一线医护人员可利用该框架为有感染或传播新冠病毒风险、无法自理且有游荡行为的患者制定以患者为中心的平衡护理计划。