• Critical care medicine · Oct 2019

    Agreement With Consensus Statements on End-of-Life Care: A Description of Variability at the Level of the Provider, Hospital, and Country.

    • Ann C Long, Lyndia C Brumback, Curtis J Randall JR Harborview Medical Center, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep. Cambia Pa, Alexander Avidan, Mario Baras, Edoardo De Robertis, Linda Efferen, Ruth A Engelberg, Erin K Kross, Andrej Michalsen, Richard A Mularski, Charles L Sprung, and Worldwide End-of-Life Practice for Patients in ICUs (WELPICUS) Investigators.
    • Harborview Medical Center, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2019 Oct 1; 47 (10): 1396-1401.

    ObjectivesTo develop an enhanced understanding of factors that influence providers' views about end-of-life care, we examined the contributions of provider, hospital, and country to variability in agreement with consensus statements about end-of-life care.Design And SettingData were drawn from a survey of providers' views on principles of end-of-life care obtained during the consensus process for the Worldwide End-of-Life Practice for Patients in ICUs study.SubjectsParticipants in Worldwide End-of-Life Practice for Patients in ICUs included physicians, nurses, and other providers. Our sample included 1,068 providers from 178 hospitals and 31 countries.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsWe examined views on cardiopulmonary resuscitation and withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatments, using a three-level linear mixed model of responses from providers within hospitals within countries. Of 1,068 providers from 178 hospitals and 31 countries, 1% strongly disagreed, 7% disagreed, 11% were neutral, 44% agreed, and 36% strongly agreed with declining to offer cardiopulmonary resuscitation when not indicated. Of the total variability in those responses, 98%, 0%, and 2% were explained by differences among providers, hospitals, and countries, respectively. After accounting for provider characteristics and hospital size, the variance partition was similar. Results were similar for withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatments.ConclusionsVariability in agreement with consensus statements about end-of-life care is related primarily to differences among providers. Acknowledging the primary source of variability may facilitate efforts to achieve consensus and improve decision-making for critically ill patients and their family members at the end of life.

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