Suppr超能文献

涉及意识障碍患者的临床护理和研究中的公平性。

Equity in Clinical Care and Research Involving Persons with Disorders of Consciousness.

机构信息

University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, TX, USA.

NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.

出版信息

Neurocrit Care. 2024 Oct;41(2):345-356. doi: 10.1007/s12028-024-02012-3. Epub 2024 Jun 13.

Abstract

People with disorders of consciousness (DoC) are characteristically unable to synchronously participate in decision-making about clinical care or research. The inability to self-advocate exacerbates preexisting socioeconomic and geographic disparities, which include the wide variability observed across individuals, hospitals, and countries in access to acute care, expertise, and sophisticated diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic interventions. Concerns about equity for people with DoC are particularly notable when they lack a surrogate decision-maker (legally referred to as "unrepresented" or "unbefriended"). Decisions about both short-term and long-term life-sustaining treatment typically rely on neuroprognostication and individual patient preferences that carry additional ethical considerations for people with DoC, as even individuals with well thought out advance directives cannot anticipate every possible situation to guide such decisions. Further challenges exist with the inclusion of people with DoC in research because consent must be completed (in most circumstances) through a surrogate, which excludes those who are unrepresented and may discourage investigators from exploring questions related to this population. In this article, the Curing Coma Campaign Ethics Working Group reviews equity considerations in clinical care and research involving persons with DoC in the following domains: (1) access to acute care and expertise, (2) access to diagnostics and therapeutics, (3) neuroprognostication, (4) medical decision-making for unrepresented people, (5) end-of-life decision-making, (6) access to postacute rehabilitative care, (7) access to research, (8) inclusion of unrepresented people in research, and (9) remuneration and reciprocity for research participation. The goal of this discussion is to advance equitable, harmonized, guideline-directed, and goal-concordant care for people with DoC of all backgrounds worldwide, prioritizing the ethical standards of respect for autonomy, beneficence, and justice. Although the focus of this evaluation is on people with DoC, much of the discussion can be extrapolated to other critically ill persons worldwide.

摘要

意识障碍(DOC)患者通常无法同步参与临床护理或研究的决策。无法自我倡导加剧了先前存在的社会经济和地理差异,包括个体、医院和国家之间在获得急性护理、专业知识以及复杂诊断、预后和治疗干预方面的广泛差异。当 DOC 患者缺乏替代决策人(法律上称为“无代表”或“无朋友”)时,对他们的公平性的担忧尤其明显。短期和长期维持生命的治疗决策通常依赖于神经预后判断和患者个人偏好,这对 DOC 患者带来了额外的伦理考虑,因为即使是有深思熟虑的预先指示的个人也无法预测每一种情况来指导这些决策。DOC 患者参与研究也存在进一步的挑战,因为同意必须通过替代者完成(在大多数情况下),这排除了那些没有代表的人,并可能阻止研究人员探索与该人群相关的问题。在本文中,治愈昏迷运动伦理工作组审查了在以下领域涉及意识障碍患者的临床护理和研究中的公平性考虑因素:(1)急性护理和专业知识的获取,(2)诊断和治疗的获取,(3)神经预后判断,(4)无代表者的医疗决策,(5)临终决策,(6)接受后期康复护理,(7)接受研究,(8)在研究中纳入无代表者,以及(9)研究参与的报酬和互惠。本次讨论的目的是为世界各地所有背景的意识障碍患者提供公平、协调、有指导原则和符合目标的护理,优先考虑尊重自主、善行和正义的伦理标准。虽然本次评估的重点是意识障碍患者,但大部分讨论内容可以推广到全球其他重症患者。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验