• J Gen Intern Med · Sep 2009

    Multicenter Study Comparative Study

    Physicians' experience with surrogate decision making for hospitalized adults.

    • Alexia M Torke, Mark Siegler, Anna Abalos, Rachael M Moloney, and G Caleb Alexander.
    • Indiana University Center for Aging Research, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA. atorke@iupui.edu
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2009 Sep 1;24(9):1023-8.

    BackgroundHospitalized patients frequently lack decision-making ability, yet little is known about physicians' approaches to surrogate decision making.ObjectiveTo describe physicians' experiences with surrogate communication and decision making for hospitalized adults.DesignCross-sectional written survey.ParticipantsTwo hundred eighty-one physicians who recently cared for adult inpatients in one academic and two community hospitals.MeasurementsKey features of physicians' most recent surrogate decision-making experience, including the nature of the decision, the physician's reaction, physician-surrogate communication and physician-surrogate agreement about the best course of action.ResultsNearly three fourths of physicians (73%, n = 206) had made a major decision with a surrogate during the past month. Although nearly all patients (90%) had a surrogate, physicians reported trouble contacting the surrogate in 21% of cases. Conflict was rare (5%), and a majority of physicians agreed with surrogates about the medical facts (77%), prognosis (72%) and best course of action (65%). After adjustment for patient, physician and decision characteristics, agreement about the best course of action was more common among surrogates for older patients [prevalence ratio (PR) = 1.17 for each decade; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.02-1.31], ICU patients (PR = 1.40; CI 1.14-1.51) and patients who had previously discussed their wishes (PR = 1.60; CI 1.30-1.76), and less common when surrogates were difficult to contact (PR = 0.59; CI 0.29-0.92) or when the physician self-identified as Asian (PR = 0.60; CI 0.30-0.94).ConclusionSurrogate decision making is common among hospitalized adults. Physician-surrogate decision making may be enhanced if patients discuss their preferences in advance and if physician contact with surrogate decision makers is facilitated.

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