Ethical Principles, Communication, and End-of-Life Care

Chapter 102


Ethical Principles, Communication, and End-of-Life Care image



Death is common in intensive care units (ICUs). Approximately 20% of deaths in the United States occur in ICUs, and 50% of patients dying in a hospital spend at least some of their hospitalization time in an ICU. Although the majority of these deaths in ICUs involve the withholding or withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy, few of these patients have the capacity to make decisions regarding goals of care and the limitation of life-prolonging therapies. Likewise, only a small percentage of patients have completed an advance directive that might aid surrogates and physicians in the decision-making process. Many decisions about end of life in the ICU are therefore made without the patient’s direct involvement or input. This chapter describes the principles of medical ethics as applied to end-of-life decision making and care for ICU patients.




Rights of the Patient



Patient Autonomy Defined


The essence of respect for patient autonomy and self-determination is that an appropriately informed adult patient, with adequate decision-making capacity, has the right to refuse any medical therapy, including life-sustaining ones. Not only has a broad ethical consensus emerged to support this principle, but also both statutory law and important judicial decisions in the United States have established this as a legal right of capable adult patients. Under this principle, absent countervailing obligations, the physician should respect a capable and informed patient’s decisions to forgo life-sustaining medical care. However, although autonomy gives patients the right to refuse treatment, it does not give them or their surrogates the unqualified right to demand and receive any desired intervention. Rather, patients, or those making decisions on their behalf, are specifically entitled to accept or forgo medical interventions that fall within the standard of medical care.



Medical Decision Making for the Patient Lacking Capacity


More often than not, patients in the ICU lack sufficient capacity to provide informed consent or refusal of a recommended therapy (Box 102.1). When patients unexpectedly experience acute life-threatening illness, it is permissible to assume their consent in order to preserve life. However, if patients lack adequate decision-making capacity and are unable to speak for themselves, their right to making decisions passes to a surrogate decision maker or health care proxy to make decisions on their behalf. Ideally this should be someone whom the patient identified as her or his preferred surrogate, such as the holder of a durable power of attorney. Patients often select someone who is close to the patient and who has knowledge of the patient’s values, life goals, and preferences about the use of life-sustaining interventions.



Explicit to the surrogate decision-making process is the initial expectation that medical decisions will be made on the basis of what patients would want if they could speak for themselves (called the “substituted judgment” standard). In this regard, an advance directive may be helpful. Unfortunately, a majority of patients have not completed any advance care planning or had any discussions about these issues with those who are close to them.


In the absence of an advance directive (or clear direction from such a document) or knowledge of specific patient preferences, physicians and surrogates should work together to make decisions that are informed by both the patient’s physiologic and clinical conditions as well as the values, goals, and life of the patient. In this process the surrogates provide knowledge of the patient’s goals and life values (substituted interest), and the clinicians present information on the risks and benefits of specific interventions and the expectations for recovery from critical illness. Ultimately, in an iterative and collaborative way, a decision based on the “best interests” of the patient is made about a plan of care in which the “pros” of the decision outweigh the “cons.”




Duties of Physicians


The principles of beneficence (being of benefit to the patient) and nonmaleficence (doing no harm to the patient) obligate physicians to promote the health and well-being of the patient and minimize pain and suffering in ways that are caring and respectful of the patient’s dignity and worth as a human being. In contrast to these duties, the physician is not obligated to provide treatments or interventions that are physiologically ineffective, lacking in medical benefit, or otherwise medically inappropriate. Many ICU clinicians regard as medically inappropriate the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in response to a cardiopulmonary arrest in the setting of refractory sepsis despite antibiotics and other maximal life-sustaining interventions (e.g., high dose vasopressors).



Medical Futility


The potential conflict between the rights of patients and the obligations of physicians has played out in the long and ongoing debate over the use of futility as a basis for decision making. Some distinguish between physiologic futility and medical futility. If the intervention is determined to be physiologically futile (i.e., it cannot achieve its stated goal), then it can be withheld or withdrawn without the consent or approval of the patient or the surrogate (as it would be medically inappropriate to give a patient a useless intervention).


When invoking medical futility, physicians generally refer to a perceived lack of meaningful recovery (usually based on their own opinion of the patient’s apparent low quality of life), a low chance of success, or both. Critics have argued that the term medical futility remains ambiguous, too value laden, and too difficult to apply consistently or fairly. Among a slew of ambiguities, it is impossible to exclude the influence of the clinician’s personal values, undermining medical futility as ethically sound. image




Building Trust and Communication Skills


Disagreements at times do arise between health care providers and patients or their surrogates over the goals and plan of care and the continued use of life-sustaining interventions. Although each situation has its own unique features, the majority of these conflicts to some degree involve an absence or loss of trust on the part of the patient/surrogate for the health care team. Therefore, a primary task for the ICU clinician is to establish, nurture, and sustain trust with patients and their family members/loved ones. This trust is ultimately earned by delivering compassionate, high-quality care, and enabled by providing effective communication. Importantly, fostering trust in this way enables the autonomous rights of the patient.



Trust Earned by Delivering Compassionate, High-Quality Care


Clinicians are susceptible to the assumption that by virtue of their position they are entitled to the trust of patients and their families. It is vital to guard against this attitude and instead have the perspective that for each new patient trust must be earned. This trust is fostered by compassionately delivering the best care possible to the patient and then by providing opportunities for the family to learn of the high-quality care that is being provided. These include liberal visiting hours that allow the family to be present for extended periods of time and thus see the full range of care that is being provided; communicating consistently (ideally daily) with the family about the care being provided; and including the family in the patient rounds of the ICU team (see Chapter 106). Lapses in care may occur and can severely undermine the trust that the patient or family has for the health care providers. When medical errors occur, it is essential to regain or maintain the trust of the patient or family by responding in a proactive, transparent, and truthful way (Chapter 107).



Trust Enabled by Consistently Effective Communication


For communication to be effective in the ICU, it must be understandable and welcoming of questions, timely, truthful, respectful and culturally informed. It also entails empathic listening with a genuine desire to know and understand the patient and family.



Communication That Is Understandable and Welcoming of Questions


Medical information provided should be presented in language that is at a level of detail appropriate for the patient or surrogate decision makers to understand. Further, patients and families should be encouraged to ask questions and to express their feelings. The importance of doing these things is emphasized by studies showing that as many as 50% of patients and families are unable to express a clear understanding of basic information about diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment after speaking with physicians. With the increasing diversity of the United States population, health care providers are more likely to encounter patients and families who have limited or a complete lack of proficiency in the English-language. Although the use of family members and friends to provide language interpretation may be all that is readily available on a day-to-day basis, a trained medical interpreter (either in person or by phone) should be employed for critical conversations or discussions about the goals of care.



Frequent and Timely Communication


The importance of frequently updating the families of critically ill patients about their loved one’s clinical status and course cannot be overstated. It is recommended that in a very intentional way the clinicians should meet with the patient’s family within 24 to 36 hours to review initial events and issues pertinent to the patient’s admission to the ICU. This is not an end-of-life family conference. Instead, as appropriate for each patient, this is a meeting in which hope and determination for achieving recovery are emphasized, whereas perspective is provided on the limits of curative efforts and the benchmarks of recovery or decline are presented. This initial meeting should then be followed ideally by daily efforts to communicate with the family about the patient’s clinical course, a task that may be facilitated by including it as an item on a checklist or achieved by having the family present during work rounds. When large or dispersed families are involved, it is usually helpful to identify one individual to serve as the family’s spokesperson and the conduit of information between the family and the ICU team.



Truthful Communication


Out of fear of delivering bad news or destroying the hope of the family, ICU physicians may not be completely truthful in discussing the patient’s clinical status with the family. In doing this, the physician is actually undermining the principle of autonomy as appropriate decision making requires that the surrogates have accurate and complete information about the patient. Moreover, most families do not consider the withholding of prognostic information as an appropriate way of maintaining their hope. Consequently, the ICU physicians should provide their best assessment of the patient’s prognosis while recognizing the uncertainty of such prognostication for individual patients. Not infrequently, however, there will be instances in which patients and families will have strong hopes for an outcome the physician believes is very unlikely to happen. Rather than trying to intellectually convince the family that what they are hoping for is highly unlikely to occur, a more effective approach is to redirect expectations to other, more attainable goals. This might be presented by saying, “I know that you are hoping for … but I don’t know if we can make that happen. If not, are there other goals you have for your loved one?”

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Jul 7, 2016 | Posted by in CRITICAL CARE | Comments Off on Ethical Principles, Communication, and End-of-Life Care

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