• Crit Care · Jan 2010

    Comparative Study

    Respiratory support withdrawal in intensive care units: families, physicians and nurses views on two hypothetical clinical scenarios.

    • Renata R L Fumis and Daniel Deheinzelin.
    • Unidade de Terapia Intensiva, Centro de Tratamento e Pesquisa Hospital AC Camargo, Rua Prof, Antônio Prudente, 211 - São Paulo, SP, Brazil CEP 01509-900. regolins@uol.com.br
    • Crit Care. 2010 Jan 1;14(6):R235.

    IntroductionEvidence suggests that dying patients' physical and emotional suffering is inadequately treated in intensive care units. Although there are recommendations regarding decisions to forgo life-sustaining therapy, deciding on withdrawal of life support is difficult, and it is also difficult to decide who should participate in this decision.MethodsWe distributed a self-administered questionnaire in 13 adult intensive care units (ICUs) assessing the attitudes of physicians and nurses regarding end-of-life decisions. Family members from a medical-surgical ICU in a tertiary cancer hospital were also invited to participate. Questions were related to two hypothetical clinical scenarios, one with a competent patient and the other with an incompetent patient, asking whether the ventilator treatment should be withdrawn and about who should make this decision.ResultsPhysicians (155) and nurses (204) of 12 ICUs agreed to take part in this study, along with 300 family members. The vast majority of families (78.6%), physicians (74.8%) and nurses (75%) want to discuss end-of-life decisions with competent patients. Most of the physicians and nurses desire family involvement in end-of-life decisions. Physicians are more likely to propose withdrawal of the ventilator with competent patients than with incompetent patients (74.8% × 60.7%, P = 0.028). When the patient was incompetent, physicians (34.8%) were significantly less prone than nurses (23.0%) and families (14.7%) to propose decisions regarding withdrawal of the ventilator support (P < 0.001).ConclusionsPhysicians, nurses and families recommended limiting life-support therapy with terminally ill patients and favored family participation. In decisions concerning an incompetent patient, physicians were more likely to maintain the therapy.

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