Division of Neurology, Department of Internal Medicine, Highland Hospital, Oakland, CA.
Department of Medicine, Palliative and Supportive Care Service, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Crit Care Med. 2023 Jul 1;51(7):924-935. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000005850. Epub 2023 Mar 27.
In the early phase of severe acute brain injury (SABI), surrogate decision-makers must make treatment decisions in the face of prognostic uncertainty. Evidence-based strategies to communicate uncertainty and support decision-making are lacking. Our objective was to better understand surrogate experiences and needs during the period of active decision-making in SABI, to inform interventions to support SABI patients and families and improve clinician-surrogate communication.
We interviewed surrogate decision-makers during patients' acute hospitalization for SABI, as part of a larger ( n = 222) prospective longitudinal cohort study of patients with SABI and their family members. Constructivist grounded theory informed data collection and analysis.
One U.S. academic medical center.
We iteratively collected and analyzed semistructured interviews with 22 surrogates for 19 patients.
None.
Through several rounds of coding, interview notes, reflexive memos, and group discussion, we developed a thematic model describing the relationship between surrogate perspectives on decision-making and surrogate experiences of prognostic uncertainty. Patients ranged from 20 to 79 years of age (mean = 55 years) and had primary diagnoses of stroke ( n = 13; 68%), traumatic brain injury ( n = 5; 26%), and anoxic brain injury after cardiac arrest ( n = 1; 5%). Patients were predominantly male ( n = 12; 63%), whereas surrogates were predominantly female ( n = 13; 68%). Two distinct perspectives on decision-making emerged: one group of surrogates felt a clear sense of agency around decision-making, whereas the other group reported a more passive role in decision-making, such that they did not even perceive there being a decision to make. Surrogates in both groups identified prognostic uncertainty as the central challenge in SABI, but they managed it differently. Only surrogates who felt they were actively deciding described time-limited trials as helpful.
In this qualitative study, not all surrogate "decision-makers" viewed themselves as making decisions. Nearly all struggled with prognostic uncertainty. Our findings underline the need for longitudinal prognostic communication strategies in SABI targeted at surrogates' current perspectives on decision-making.
在严重急性脑损伤(SABI)的早期阶段,替代决策人必须在预后不确定的情况下做出治疗决策。缺乏循证策略来沟通不确定性并支持决策。我们的目的是更好地了解 SABI 期间替代决策者的经验和需求,为支持 SABI 患者和家庭的干预措施提供信息,并改善临床医生与替代决策者的沟通。
我们在 SABI 患者的急性住院期间对替代决策人进行了访谈,这是一项对 SABI 患者及其家属进行的更大规模(n=222)前瞻性纵向队列研究的一部分。建构主义扎根理论指导了数据收集和分析。
美国一家学术医疗中心。
我们对 19 名患者的 22 名替代决策者进行了半结构化访谈,这些访谈是迭代进行的。
无。
通过几轮编码、访谈记录、反思性备忘录和小组讨论,我们开发了一个主题模型,描述了替代决策者对决策的看法与替代决策者对预后不确定性的体验之间的关系。患者年龄从 20 岁到 79 岁(平均 55 岁),主要诊断为中风(n=13;68%)、创伤性脑损伤(n=5;26%)和心脏骤停后缺氧性脑损伤(n=1;5%)。患者主要为男性(n=12;63%),而替代决策者主要为女性(n=13;68%)。出现了两种截然不同的决策视角:一组替代决策者对决策有一种明确的代理感,而另一组则在决策中扮演更被动的角色,以至于他们甚至没有意识到需要做出决策。两组替代决策者都将预后不确定性视为 SABI 的核心挑战,但他们的处理方式不同。只有那些认为自己在积极决策的替代决策者才会觉得限时试验有帮助。
在这项定性研究中,并非所有的替代“决策者”都认为自己在做决策。几乎所有人都在与预后不确定性作斗争。我们的发现强调了 SABI 中针对替代决策者当前决策观点的纵向预后沟通策略的必要性。