Department of IQ Healthcare, Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Radboud University Medical Center, Kapittelweg 54, 6525 EP, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Crit Care. 2023 Jul 28;27(1):299. doi: 10.1186/s13054-023-04581-9.
The Netherlands introduced an opt-out donor system in 2020. While the default in (presumed) consent cases is donation, family involvement adds a crucial layer of influence when applying this default in clinical practice. We explored how clinicians discuss patients' donor registrations of (presumed) consent in donor conversations in the first years of the opt-out system.
A qualitative embedded multiple-case study in eight Dutch hospitals. We performed a thematic analysis based on audio recordings and direct observations of donor conversations (n = 15, 7 consent and 8 presumed consent) and interviews with the clinicians involved (n = 16).
Clinicians' personal considerations, their prior experiences with the family and contextual factors in the clinicians' profession defined their points of departure for the conversations. Four routes to discuss patients' donor registrations were constructed. In the Consent route (A), clinicians followed patients' explicit donation wishes. With presumed consent, increased uncertainty in interpreting the donation wish appeared and prompted clinicians to refer to "the law" as a conversation starter and verify patients' wishes multiple times with the family. In the Presumed consent route (B), clinicians followed the law intending to effectuate donation, which was more easily achieved when families recognised and agreed with the registration. In the Consensus route (C), clinicians provided families some participation in decision-making, while in the Family consent route (D), families were given full decisional capacity to pursue optimal grief processing.
Donor conversations in an opt-out system are a complex interplay between seemingly straightforward donor registrations and clinician-family interactions. When clinicians are left with concerns regarding patients' consent or families' coping, families are given a larger role in the decision. A strict uniform application of the opt-out system is unfeasible. We suggest incorporating the four previously described routes in clinical training, stimulating discussions across cases, and encouraging public conversations about donation.
荷兰于 2020 年引入了一种选择退出的捐赠者制度。在(假定)同意的情况下,默认选择是捐赠,而在临床实践中应用这种默认选择时,家庭的参与增加了一个至关重要的影响因素。我们探讨了临床医生在选择退出制度实施的头几年中,如何在捐赠者对话中讨论患者的(假定)同意的捐赠登记。
这是一项在荷兰 8 家医院进行的定性嵌入式多案例研究。我们对捐赠者对话(n=15,7 例同意,8 例假定同意)的音频记录和直接观察以及涉及的临床医生的访谈(n=16)进行了主题分析。
临床医生的个人考虑、他们以前与家庭的经验以及他们职业中的背景因素决定了他们对话的起点。构建了四种讨论患者捐赠登记的途径。在同意途径(A)中,临床医生遵循患者明确的捐赠意愿。在假定同意的情况下,对捐赠意愿的解释变得更加不确定,这促使临床医生将“法律”作为对话的起点,并多次与家属核实患者的意愿。在假定同意途径(B)中,临床医生遵循法律意图实现捐赠,当家庭承认并同意登记时,这更容易实现。在共识途径(C)中,临床医生为家庭提供了一些参与决策的机会,而在家庭同意途径(D)中,家庭被赋予了充分的决策能力,以实现最佳的悲伤处理。
在选择退出系统中,捐赠者对话是看似简单的捐赠登记与临床医生-家庭互动之间的复杂相互作用。当临床医生对患者的同意或家庭的应对存在疑虑时,家庭在决策中扮演更重要的角色。严格统一地应用选择退出系统是不可行的。我们建议将之前描述的四种途径纳入临床培训中,鼓励跨案例进行讨论,并鼓励公众就捐赠进行对话。