Cargando…

The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories

BACKGROUND: With increasingly intensive treatments and population ageing, more people face complex treatment and care decisions. We explored patterns of the decision-making processes during critical care, and sources of conflict and resolution. METHODS: Ethnographic study in two Intensive Care Units...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Higginson, I. J., Rumble, C., Shipman, C., Koffman, J., Sleeman, K. E., Morgan, M., Hopkins, P., Noble, J., Bernal, W., Leonard, S., Dampier, O., Prentice, W., Burman, R., Costantini, M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4746769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26860461
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12871-016-0177-2
_version_ 1782414860069371904
author Higginson, I. J.
Rumble, C.
Shipman, C.
Koffman, J.
Sleeman, K. E.
Morgan, M.
Hopkins, P.
Noble, J.
Bernal, W.
Leonard, S.
Dampier, O.
Prentice, W.
Burman, R.
Costantini, M.
author_facet Higginson, I. J.
Rumble, C.
Shipman, C.
Koffman, J.
Sleeman, K. E.
Morgan, M.
Hopkins, P.
Noble, J.
Bernal, W.
Leonard, S.
Dampier, O.
Prentice, W.
Burman, R.
Costantini, M.
author_sort Higginson, I. J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: With increasingly intensive treatments and population ageing, more people face complex treatment and care decisions. We explored patterns of the decision-making processes during critical care, and sources of conflict and resolution. METHODS: Ethnographic study in two Intensive Care Units (ICUs) in an inner city hospital comprising: non-participant observation of general care and decisions, followed by case studies where treatment limitation decisions, comfort care and/or end of life discussions were occurring. These involved: semi-structured interviews with consenting families, where possible, patients; direct observations of care; and review of medical records. RESULTS: Initial non-participant observation included daytime, evenings, nights and weekends. The cases were 16 patients with varied diagnoses, aged 19-87 years; 19 family members were interviewed, aged 30-73 years. Cases were observed for <1 to 156 days (median 22), depending on length of ICU admission. Decisions were made serially over the whole trajectory, usually several days or weeks. We identified four trajectories with distinct patterns: curative care from admission; oscillating curative and comfort care; shift to comfort care; comfort care from admission. Some families considered decision-making a negative concept and preferred uncertainty. Conflict occurred most commonly in the trajectories with oscillating curative and comfort care. Conflict also occurred inside clinical teams. Families were most often involved in decision-making regarding care outcomes and seemed to find it easier when patients switched definitively from curative to comfort care. We found eight categories of decision-making; three related to the care outcomes (aim, place, response to needs) and five to the care processes (resuscitation, decision support, medications/fluids, monitoring/interventions, other specialty involvement). CONCLUSIONS: Decision-making in critical illness involves a web of discussions regarding the potential outcomes and processes of care, across the whole disease trajectory. When measures oscillate between curative and comfort there is greatest conflict. This suggests a need to support early communication, especially around values and preferred care outcomes, from which other decisions follow, including DNAR. Offering further support, possibly with expert palliative care, communication, and discussion of ‘trial of treatment’ may be beneficial at this time, rather than waiting until the ‘end of life’.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4746769
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-47467692016-02-10 The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories Higginson, I. J. Rumble, C. Shipman, C. Koffman, J. Sleeman, K. E. Morgan, M. Hopkins, P. Noble, J. Bernal, W. Leonard, S. Dampier, O. Prentice, W. Burman, R. Costantini, M. BMC Anesthesiol Research Article BACKGROUND: With increasingly intensive treatments and population ageing, more people face complex treatment and care decisions. We explored patterns of the decision-making processes during critical care, and sources of conflict and resolution. METHODS: Ethnographic study in two Intensive Care Units (ICUs) in an inner city hospital comprising: non-participant observation of general care and decisions, followed by case studies where treatment limitation decisions, comfort care and/or end of life discussions were occurring. These involved: semi-structured interviews with consenting families, where possible, patients; direct observations of care; and review of medical records. RESULTS: Initial non-participant observation included daytime, evenings, nights and weekends. The cases were 16 patients with varied diagnoses, aged 19-87 years; 19 family members were interviewed, aged 30-73 years. Cases were observed for <1 to 156 days (median 22), depending on length of ICU admission. Decisions were made serially over the whole trajectory, usually several days or weeks. We identified four trajectories with distinct patterns: curative care from admission; oscillating curative and comfort care; shift to comfort care; comfort care from admission. Some families considered decision-making a negative concept and preferred uncertainty. Conflict occurred most commonly in the trajectories with oscillating curative and comfort care. Conflict also occurred inside clinical teams. Families were most often involved in decision-making regarding care outcomes and seemed to find it easier when patients switched definitively from curative to comfort care. We found eight categories of decision-making; three related to the care outcomes (aim, place, response to needs) and five to the care processes (resuscitation, decision support, medications/fluids, monitoring/interventions, other specialty involvement). CONCLUSIONS: Decision-making in critical illness involves a web of discussions regarding the potential outcomes and processes of care, across the whole disease trajectory. When measures oscillate between curative and comfort there is greatest conflict. This suggests a need to support early communication, especially around values and preferred care outcomes, from which other decisions follow, including DNAR. Offering further support, possibly with expert palliative care, communication, and discussion of ‘trial of treatment’ may be beneficial at this time, rather than waiting until the ‘end of life’. BioMed Central 2016-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4746769/ /pubmed/26860461 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12871-016-0177-2 Text en © Higginson et al. 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Higginson, I. J.
Rumble, C.
Shipman, C.
Koffman, J.
Sleeman, K. E.
Morgan, M.
Hopkins, P.
Noble, J.
Bernal, W.
Leonard, S.
Dampier, O.
Prentice, W.
Burman, R.
Costantini, M.
The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
title The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
title_full The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
title_fullStr The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
title_full_unstemmed The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
title_short The value of uncertainty in critical illness? An ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
title_sort value of uncertainty in critical illness? an ethnographic study of patterns and conflicts in care and decision-making trajectories
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4746769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26860461
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12871-016-0177-2
work_keys_str_mv AT higginsonij thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT rumblec thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT shipmanc thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT koffmanj thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT sleemanke thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT morganm thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT hopkinsp thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT noblej thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT bernalw thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT leonards thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT dampiero thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT prenticew thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT burmanr thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT costantinim thevalueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT higginsonij valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT rumblec valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT shipmanc valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT koffmanj valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT sleemanke valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT morganm valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT hopkinsp valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT noblej valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT bernalw valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT leonards valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT dampiero valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT prenticew valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT burmanr valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories
AT costantinim valueofuncertaintyincriticalillnessanethnographicstudyofpatternsandconflictsincareanddecisionmakingtrajectories