Teno J M, Hakim R B, Knaus W A, Wenger N S, Phillips R S, Wu A W, Layde P, Connors A F, Dawson N V, Lynn J
Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755-3863, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 1995 Apr;10(4):179-86. doi: 10.1007/BF02600252.
To describe the association between hospital resource utilization and physicians' knowledge of patient preferences for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) among seriously ill hospitalized adult patients.
Prospective cohort study.
Five U.S. academic medical center, 1989-1991.
A sample of 2,636 patients with self- or surrogate interviews and matching physician interviews describing patient preferences for CPR, from a cohort of 4,301 patients with life-threatening illnesses enrolled in the Study to Understand Prognoses and Preferences for Outcomes and Risks of Treatments (SUPPORT).
Patient, surrogate, and physician reports of preferences for resuscitation, and resource use derived from the Therapeutic Intensity Scoring System and hospital length of stay, converted into 1990 dollars.
Nearly one-third of the patients preferred to forego resuscitation. Of the 2,636 paired physician-patient answers, nearly one-third did not agree about preferences for resuscitation. The physicians' views of the patients' preferences and those preferences themselves were both associated with resource use. Standardized adjusted hospital resource consumption, expressed as average cost in dollars during the enrollment hospitalization, was lowest when the physician agreed with the patient preference for a do-not-resuscitate order ($20,527), and highest when the patient did not have a preference and the physician believed the patient wanted resuscitation in the case of a cardiopulmonary arrest ($34,829). Hospital resource use was intermediate when patient-physician pairs evidenced either lack of agreement or communication, or awareness of options about resuscitation.
Both physician and patient preferences for CPR influence total hospital resource consumption. Physician misunderstanding of patient preferences to forego CPR was associated with increased use of hospital resources, and could have led to a course of care at odds with patients' expressed preferences in the event of cardiac arrest. Increasing physicians' knowledge of patient preferences, and increasing communication to help patients understand that options for medical care that include foregoing resuscitation efforts, might reduce hospital expenditures for the seriously ill.
描述住院重症成年患者的医院资源利用情况与医生对患者心肺复苏(CPR)偏好的了解之间的关联。
前瞻性队列研究。
美国五家学术医疗中心,1989 - 1991年。
从4301名患有危及生命疾病的患者队列中抽取的2636名患者样本,这些患者接受了自我访谈或代理访谈,并进行了匹配的医生访谈,以描述患者对CPR的偏好,该队列参与了“了解治疗结果和风险的预后及偏好研究”(SUPPORT)。
患者、代理人和医生关于复苏偏好的报告,以及从治疗强度评分系统和住院时间得出的资源使用情况,换算为1990年美元。
近三分之一的患者倾向于放弃复苏。在2636对医生与患者的回答中,近三分之一在复苏偏好上存在分歧。医生对患者偏好的看法以及这些偏好本身都与资源使用有关。标准化调整后的医院资源消耗,以入院住院期间的平均美元成本表示,当医生同意患者放弃复苏的偏好时最低(20527美元),当患者没有偏好且医生认为患者在心肺骤停时希望进行复苏时最高(34829美元)。当医患双方意见不一致、缺乏沟通或对复苏选项缺乏认知时,医院资源使用处于中间水平。
医生和患者对CPR的偏好都会影响医院的总资源消耗。医生对患者放弃CPR偏好的误解与医院资源使用增加有关,并且在心脏骤停时可能导致治疗过程与患者表达的偏好不一致。增加医生对患者偏好的了解,以及加强沟通以帮助患者理解包括放弃复苏努力在内的医疗选择,可能会减少重症患者的医院支出。