• J Palliat Med · Mar 2021

    Withholding/Withdrawing Life-Sustaining Treatment in a Multiethnic Critical Care Setting: An Ethnographic Study.

    • Rose-Lima Van Keer, Reginald Deschepper, Luc Huyghens, and Johan Bilsen.
    • Mental Health and Wellbeing Research Group (MENT), Department of Public Health, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium.
    • J Palliat Med. 2021 Mar 1; 24 (3): 338-346.

    Abstract Background: Critical care physicians often have to make challenging decisions to withhold/withdraw life-sustaining treatments. As a result of society's increasingly cultural diversity such decision making often involves patients from ethnic minority groups, which might pose extra challenges. Objective: To investigate withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatments with patients from ethnic minority groups and their families during critical care. Design: Ethnographic fieldwork (observations, in-depth interviews and reading patients' medical files). Setting/Subjects: Eighteen patients from ethnic minority groups, their relatives, physicians and nurses were studied in one intensive care unit of a multi-ethnic urban hospital (Belgium). Results: During decision making physicians had a very central role. The contribution of patients and nurses was limited, while families' input was more noticeable. Decision making was hampered by communication difficulties between: (1) staff and relative(s), (2) relatives, and (3) patient and relative(s). Different approaches were used by physicians to overcome difficulties, which often reflected their tendency to control decision making, for example, stressing their central role. At times their approaches reflected their inability to align families' wishes with their own, for example, when making decisions without explicitly informing relatives. Conclusions: Withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatments in a multi-ethnic critic care context has a number of alarming difficulties, such as how to take families' input correctly into account. It is important that decision making happens in a cultural sensitive way and with involvement tailored to patients' and relatives' needs and in close consultation with interprofessional health care workers/other services.

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