Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Gibbet Hill Campus, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK.
BMC Prim Care. 2024 Apr 17;25(1):115. doi: 10.1186/s12875-024-02283-x.
The Recommended Summary Plan for Emergency Care and Treatment (ReSPECT) was launched in the UK in 2016. ReSPECT is designed to facilitate meaningful discussions between healthcare professionals, patients, and their relatives about preferences for treatment in future emergencies; however, no study has investigated patients' and relatives' experiences of ReSPECT in the community.
To explore how patients and relatives in community settings experience the ReSPECT process and engage with the completed form.
Patients who had a ReSPECT form were identified through general practice surgeries in three areas in England; either patients or their relatives (where patients lacked capacity) were recruited. Semi-structured interviews were conducted, focusing on the participants' understandings and experiences of the ReSPECT process and form. Data were analysed using inductive thematic analysis.
Thirteen interviews took place (six with patients, four with relatives, three with patient and relative pairs). Four themes were developed: (1) ReSPECT records a patient's wishes, but is entangled in wider relationships; (2) healthcare professionals' framings of ReSPECT influence patients' and relatives' experiences; (3) patients and relatives perceive ReSPECT as a do-not-resuscitate or end-of-life form; (4) patients' and relatives' relationships with the ReSPECT form as a material object vary widely. Patients valued the opportunity to express their wishes and conceptualised ReSPECT as a process of caring for themselves and for their family members' emotional wellbeing. Participants who described their ReSPECT experiences positively said healthcare professionals clearly explained the ReSPECT process and form, allocated sufficient time for an open discussion of patients' preferences, and provided empathetic explanations of treatment recommendations. In cases where participants said healthcare professionals did not provide clear explanations or did not engage them in a conversation, experiences ranged from confusion about the form and how it would be used to lingering feelings of worry, upset, or being burdened with responsibility.
When ReSPECT conversations involved an open discussion of patients' preferences, clear information about the ReSPECT process, and empathetic explanations of treatment recommendations, working with a healthcare professional to co-develop a record of treatment preferences and recommendations could be an empowering experience, providing patients and relatives with peace of mind.
推荐的紧急护理和治疗计划(ReSPECT)于 2016 年在英国推出。ReSPECT 的目的是促进医疗保健专业人员、患者及其亲属就未来紧急情况下的治疗偏好进行有意义的讨论;然而,尚无研究调查社区中患者和亲属对 ReSPECT 的体验。
探讨社区环境中患者和亲属如何体验 ReSPECT 流程并参与完成的表格。
通过英格兰三个地区的全科医生手术确定了有 ReSPECT 表格的患者;招募了患者或其亲属(如果患者没有能力)。进行了半结构化访谈,重点是参与者对 ReSPECT 流程和表格的理解和体验。使用归纳主题分析对数据进行分析。
共进行了 13 次访谈(6 次与患者,4 次与亲属,3 次与患者和亲属配对)。得出了四个主题:(1)ReSPECT 记录了患者的意愿,但却陷入了更广泛的关系中;(2)医疗保健专业人员对 ReSPECT 的框架影响了患者和亲属的体验;(3)患者和亲属将 ReSPECT 视为不复苏或临终形式;(4)患者和亲属与 ReSPECT 表格作为实物对象的关系差异很大。患者重视表达自己意愿的机会,并将 ReSPECT 视为关心自己和家人情绪健康的过程。对 ReSPECT 体验评价积极的参与者表示,医疗保健专业人员清楚地解释了 ReSPECT 流程和表格,为患者偏好的开放式讨论分配了足够的时间,并对治疗建议进行了富有同理心的解释。在参与者表示医疗保健专业人员没有提供明确解释或没有与他们进行对话的情况下,体验范围从对表格及其使用方式的困惑到对表格的挥之不去的担忧、不安或感到负担过重。
当 ReSPECT 对话涉及到对患者偏好的开放式讨论、有关 ReSPECT 流程的清晰信息以及对治疗建议的富有同理心的解释时,与医疗保健专业人员合作共同制定治疗偏好和建议的记录可能是一种赋权体验,为患者和亲属提供安心。