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Who should make resus decisions?

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Who should make resus decisions? Dr Regina Mc Quillan Palliative Medicine Consultant Guardian newspaper DNAR Urgent need to institute treatment At a time when patient ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Who should make resus decisions?


1
Who should make resus decisions?
  • Dr Regina Mc Quillan
  • Palliative Medicine Consultant

2
Guardian newspaper
3
Goals of Care
  • To cure sometimes, to relieve often, to
  • comfort always

4
An intervention may
  • Cure
  • Rehabilitate
  • Prolong life
  • Stabilize condition
  • Palliate
  • Fail

5
Ethical Behaviour
  • Good is to be done and evil avoided
  • Act in the patients best interests (Medical
    Council 4.1)
  • Primum non nocere
  • Beneficence
  • Non-maleficence
  • Consider which treatment option would provide the
    best clinical outcome for the patient (Medical
    Council 34.6)

6
Twentieth century
  • Antibiotics
  • Surgery and anaesthetic advances
  • Cancer treatment
  • Diabetes management etc, etc
  • Create an expectation that health can be
    maintained and death deferred, but at some point,
    treatment not helpful

7
Challenges in treatment decisions
  • Drive to do all to prolong life
  • The technological imperative
  • Sanctity of life
  • Appropriate recognition of impossibility of
    prolonging life, and preventing death
  • Rights and responsibilities to withhold or
    withdraw treatment

8
Do Not Attempt Resuscitation Order
  • A form of advance directive or advance care plan

9
DNAR
  • Urgent need to institute treatment
  • At a time when patient is unable to consent

10
If there is no DNAR, presumption in favour of ACPR
11
Medical Council- End of Life Care
  • 22.2 There is no obligation to start or continue
    a treatment, or artificial nutrition or
    hydration, that is futile or disproportionately
    burdensome
  • 22.4 You should take care to communicate
    effectively and sensitively with patients and
    their families so that they can have a clear
    understanding of what can and cannot be achieved

12
Futility
  • Futility is goal specific
  • Physiological futility is when the proposed
    intervention cannot physiologically achieve the
    desired effect. Most objective definition
  • Quantitative futility is when the proposed
    intervention is highly unlikely to achieve the
    desired effect.
  • Qualitative futility is when the proposed
    intervention, if successful, will probably
    produce such a poor outcome that it is best not
    to attempt it
  • Sokol, DK. BMJ 2009 338b2222

13
Futile treatment as ritual
  • Rituals are used to make sense of life events
  • CPR may be futile, but when it fails, clearly
    defines for the family and staff the moment of
    death
  • Mohammed and Peter, Nursing Ethics, 2009,16(3)
    292-302

14
Attempted cardiopulmonary resuscitation
  • Less than 2 success rate
  • Success rate lower with increasing age,
  • co-morbidities, unwitnessed arrests, out of
    hospital

15
When to make decision?
  • Health care transitions
  • New diagnosis of fatal illness
  • Deterioration in chronic illness eg
  • -multiple admissions with eg COPD, CCF
  • -MND needing RIG or NIV
  • -nursing home admission
  • -dementia with feeding problems
  • -cancer progression

16
Who makes the decision?
  • Patient choice to refuse treatment even if life-
    prolonging
  • If ACPR is not futile, consider patient
    involvement
  • If ACPR is futile, should not be offered
  • If patient requests ACPR which is considered
    futile, explore understanding of ACPR the
    patients wishes should be respected where
    possible. Doctors are not required to give
    treatment against their wishes.

  • DHRMF 2010

17
Who makes the decision?
  • No one has the right to make a health care
    decision for an adult.
  • Decision-making is the responsibility of the
    doctor in charge, and must be in the best
    interests of the patient, in consultation with
    the multidisciplinary team and the patients
    family network
  • Consultation with the family, sensitive and clear

18
Family
19
Family
  • Whose is the family?

20
Family
  • Whose is the family?
  • Their role is to represent what the patients
    wish may be
  • Must consider the patients best interest

21
Team conflict
22
Team conflict
  • If you keep on doing what you are doing, you will
    keep on getting what youve got

23
Team conflict
  • If you keep on doing what you are doing, you will
    keep on getting what youve got
  • Everybody acts in the patients interest

24
Team conflict
  • If you keep on doing what you are doing, you will
    keep on getting what youve got
  • Everybody acts in the patients interest
  • How to effect change

25
Communicating the decision
  • To the patient, if appropriate
  • To the family, for information, not decision
  • In healthcare record
  • In transfer documentation

26
Who makes resus decisions?
  • The patient can refuse
  • The patient cant insist on futile treatment
  • If there is doubt about the value, the doctor
    makes the decision, in the best interests of the
    patient, following consultation with the patient,
    family and MDT.

27
Additional reading
  • Medical Futility its Meaning and Ethical
    Implications. Schneiderman, Jecker, Jonsen.
    Annals of Internal Medicine. 1990112949-954
  • Debate Extraordinary means and the sanctity of
    life. Journal of Medical Ethics. 1981 74-82
  • Guide to Professional Conduct and Ethics for
    Registered Medical Practitioners 2009

28
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