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Pediatr Crit Care Me · May 2005
Multicenter StudyEvolution of the medical practices and modes of death on pediatric intensive care units in southern Brazil.
- Délio José Kipper, Jefferson Pedro Piva, Pedro Celiny Ramos Garcia, Paulo Roberto Einloft, Francisco Bruno, Patrícia Lago, Taís Rocha, Alaor Ernst Schein, Patrícia Scolari Fontela, Débora Hendler Gava, Luciano Guerra, Keli Chemello, Roney Bittencourt, Simone Sudbrack, Evandro Freddy Mulinari, and João Feliz Duarte Morais.
- Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Hospital São Lucas, School of Medicine, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
- Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2005 May 1;6(3):258-63.
ObjectivesTo study the possible change on mode of deaths, medical decision practices, and family participation on decisions for limiting life-sustaining treatments (L-LST) over a period of 13 yrs in three pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) located in southern Brazil.MethodsA cross-sectional study based on a retrospective chart review (1988 and 1998) and on prospective data collection (from May 1999 to May 2000).SettingThree PICUs in Porto Alegre, southern Brazilian region.PatientsChildren who died in those PICUs during the years of 1988, 1998, and between May 1999 and May 2000.ResultsThe 3 PICUs admitted 6,233 children during the study period with a mortality rate of 9.2% (575 deaths), and 509 (88.5%) medical charts were evaluated in this study. Full measures for life support (F-CPR) were recognized in 374 (73.5%) children before dying, brain death (BD) was diagnosed in 43 (8.4%), and 92 (18.1%) underwent some limitation of life support treatment (L-LST) There were 140 (27.5%) deaths within the first 24 hrs of admission and 128 of them (91.4%) received F-CPR, whereas just 11 (7.9%) patients underwent L-LST. The average length of stay for the death group submitted to F-CPR was lower (3 days) than the L-LST group (8.5 days; p < .05). The rate of F-CPR before death decreased significantly between 1988 (89.1%) and 1999/2000 (60.8%), whereas the L-LST rose in this period from 6.2% to 31.3%. These changes were not uniform among the three PICUs, with different rates of L-LST (p < .05). The families were involved in the decision-making process for L-LST in 35.9% of the cases, increasing from 12.5% in 1988 to 48.6% in 1999/2000. The L-LST plans were recorded in the medical charts in 76.1% of the deaths, increasing from 50.0% in 1988 to 95.9% in 1999/2000.ConclusionWe observed that the modes of deaths in southern Brazilian PICUs changed over the last 13 yrs, with an increment in L-LST. However, this change was not uniform among the studied PICUs and did not reach the levels described in countries of the Northern Hemisphere. Family participation in the L-LST decision-making process has increased over time, but it is still far behind what is observed in other parts of the world.
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