Gupta Mayank, Joshi Udita, Rao Seema Rajesh, Longo Mirella, Salins Naveen
Department of Anaesthesiology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda, Punjab, India.
Bangalore Hospice Trust, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
BMC Palliat Care. 2025 Apr 2;24(1):91. doi: 10.1186/s12904-025-01676-8.
Healthcare Professionals (HCPs) are important stakeholders and gatekeepers in resuscitation decision-making. This systematic review explored the views and attitudes of HCPs on do-not-attempt-cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DNAR) in low-and-lower-middle-income countries (LLMICs).
PubMed, EMBASE, PsycInfo, CINAHL, Cochrane library, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched from 01-Jan-1990 to 24-February-2023. Empirical peer-reviewed literature exploring views and attitudes of HCPs on DNAR for adult patients (aged ≽18 years) in LLMIC were included. No restriction on empirical study designs was imposed. Two independent reviewers performed screening, data extraction and critical appraisal. Hawker's tool and Popay's narrative synthesis were used for critical appraisal and data synthesis respectively. Review findings were interpreted using Cognitive Dissonance theory (CDT).
Of the 5132 records identified, 44 studies encompassing 7490 HCPs were included. The median Hawker score was 28 with 27% studies having low risk of bias. Three themes emerged. 1: Meaning-Making of DNAR construct. Most HCPs agreed that DNAR avoided inappropriate resuscitations, needless suffering and allowed fair allocation of resources. However, there was a lack of consensus on DNAR timing. 2: Barriers and Facilitators. Sociocultural norms, lack of legal clarity, organisational policies, societal and family views, religious and ethical beliefs, and healthcare providers' presuppositions often hindered DNAR practice. HCPs had inconsistent religious and ethical beliefs about DNAR. 3: Tensions and complexities of contemporary practice. HCPs expressed fears, concerns, guilt and distress while recommending DNAR. HCPs differed on involving patients. The DNAR practice was arbitrary and suboptimal like informal DNAR orders, pretended and symbolic CPRs.
Most HCPs in LLMICs viewed DNAR as essential However, they faced barriers to DNAR implementation at macro-(law, sociocultural norms), meso-(organization) and micro-(HCP- and family views) levels. These barriers contributed to HCPs' fears, concerns and distress concerning DNAR. The CDT provided the lens to link HCPs cognitions, affect and behaviour into a chain of events that explained suboptimal resuscitation practices.
CRD42023395887.
医疗保健专业人员(HCPs)是复苏决策中的重要利益相关者和把关人。本系统评价探讨了低收入和中低收入国家(LLMICs)的医疗保健专业人员对不进行心肺复苏(DNAR)的看法和态度。
检索了1990年1月1日至2023年2月24日期间的PubMed、EMBASE、PsycInfo、CINAHL、Cochrane图书馆、Scopus和Web of Science。纳入了实证同行评审文献,这些文献探讨了LLMICs中医疗保健专业人员对成年患者(年龄≥18岁)DNAR的看法和态度。对实证研究设计没有限制。两名独立评审员进行筛选、数据提取和批判性评价。分别使用霍克工具和波佩的叙述性综合法进行批判性评价和数据综合。使用认知失调理论(CDT)对综述结果进行解释。
在识别出的5132条记录中,纳入了44项研究,涉及7490名医疗保健专业人员。霍克评分中位数为28,27%的研究存在低偏倚风险。出现了三个主题。1:DNAR概念的意义建构。大多数医疗保健专业人员一致认为,DNAR避免了不适当的复苏、不必要的痛苦,并允许公平分配资源。然而,在DNAR时机方面缺乏共识。2:障碍和促进因素。社会文化规范、法律不明确、组织政策、社会和家庭观点、宗教和伦理信仰以及医疗保健提供者的预设常常阻碍DNAR的实施。医疗保健专业人员对DNAR的宗教和伦理信仰不一致。3:当代实践的紧张和复杂性。在推荐DNAR时,医疗保健专业人员表达了恐惧、担忧、内疚和痛苦。在让患者参与方面,医疗保健专业人员存在分歧。DNAR的实践是任意的且不理想,如非正式的DNAR医嘱、假装和象征性的心肺复苏。
LLMICs中的大多数医疗保健专业人员认为DNAR至关重要。然而,他们在宏观(法律、社会文化规范)、中观(组织)和微观(医疗保健专业人员和家庭观点)层面面临DNAR实施的障碍。这些障碍导致了医疗保健专业人员对DNAR的恐惧、担忧和痛苦。CDT提供了一个视角,将医疗保健专业人员的认知、情感和行为联系成一系列事件,解释了不理想的复苏实践。
CRD42023395887。