Title: Withdrawal of Ventilatory Support Educational Issues
1Withdrawal of Ventilatory SupportEducational
Issues
- James Hallenbeck, MD
- Assistant Professor of Medicine
- Director, Palliative Care Services
- VA Palliative Care services
2What are the educational issues?
83 yo man 4 months post valve replacement for
critical aortic stenosis on chronic ventilatory
support. Patient suffered multi-system failure
and now thought to be unweanable. Wife angry at
you for doing surgery and then lying about his
prognosis. Asks that you remove the tube and
allow him to die with dignity.
3In teaching about possible ventilatory
withdrawal, what topic is most important to
stress?
AIRS Slide
- Relevant ethical principles
- Proper drug usage for palliation post extubation
- Communication skills
- None of the above
- All of the above
4Outline
- Educational Principles
- Knowledge, Attitudes and Skills
- Overt and covert tension
- Educational Challenges
- General
- For surgeons
- Relative to difficult decisions such as
ventilator withdrawal
5Knowledge
What new knowledge is important for the learner?
- Understanding of relevant ethical principles
- Knowledge of relevant therapies
- Role of opioids
- Role of sedatives
- Knowledge of relevant support systems
6Attitudes
What changes in attitude does the teacher believe
are necessary?
Potential attitudes to address
- That withdrawal of support is purely a medical
decision - That previous experience and training was
adequate in addressing the issue - That treatment withdrawal is solely an ethical
problem - Not my job
7Skills
What new skills are necessary?
- Communication Skills
- Demonstrate the ability to address cognitive and
affective components of communication - Order writing skills
- Write initial orders for treatment
discontinuation, including drug doses and
indications - Access skills
- Demonstrate the ability to access support for a
grieving family
8Like a battery
Learning requires TENSION
to work
So wheres the tension in the learner?
9Tension Overt and Covert
- Overt tension what people verbally identify as
the problem - If we dont get this straightened out, well have
to trach this guy - Covert tension unspoken, sometimes unconscious
tension - Im not sure Im competent
- I dont want to be the one pulling the plug
10Subtext
- Emotional subtext often present, but not
addressed in patients and families AND in
ourselves - You doctors just used him as a guinea pig. Now
you want to get rid of him!
What is the emotional subtext for the speaker?
What is your emotional subtext?
11Ethical Principles Knowledge
AIRS Slide
Rank your knowledge
- 1 Minimal, Inadequate
- 2 Barely adequate, Struggling
- 3 Adequate
- 4 Superior
- 5 Master
12Drug Usage for Dyspnea, Agitation
AIRS Slide
Rank your skill
- 1 Minimal, Inadequate
- 2 Barely adequate, Struggling
- 3 Adequate
- 4 Superior
- 5 Master
13Necessary Communication Skills
AIRS Slide
Rank your skill in USING communication skills
- 1 Minimal, Inadequate
- 2 Barely adequate, Struggling
- 3 Adequate
- 4 Superior
- 5 Master
14Necessary Communication Skills
AIRS Slide
Rank your skill in TEACHING communication skills
- 1 Minimal, Inadequate
- 2 Barely adequate, Struggling
- 3 Adequate
- 4 Superior
- 5 Master
15Challenges in palliative care education - general
- Arrogance-Ignorance phenomenon
- Hidden curriculum
16Ignorance
Weissman et al.
Survey of Internal Medicine residents and faculty
Mean Correct
Domain PGY 1 (n 1284) PGY 2 (n 980) PGY 3,4 (n 1076) Faculty (n 1711)
Total Test 48.3 52.9 56.0 59.1
Pain 52.2 55.5 57.2 60.5
Non-pain 60.4 65.7 70.6 72.8
Communication 42.2 45.0 46.3 57.0
Terminal Care 45.7 49.3 53.9 56.0
17Arrogance
Despite minimal differences in knowledge
- Interns admitted knowledge and skill deficits and
were concerned about their competency TENSION - Residents and faculty less concerned about
ability to practice and teach palliative care - Many faculty What ME worry?
18Curriculum or Hidden Curriculum?
- End-of-life issues often relegated to the hidden
curriculum not worthy of instruction/modeling
by attendings, but informally modeled among
residents and students.
Reference Rappaport W, Witzke D. Education about
death and dying during the clinical years of
medical school. Surgery. 1993113(2)163-165.
19Rappaport Study
(n 53 surgical residents)
Key findings
- 84 of junior and 50 of senior residents
reported never hearing an attending discuss how
to do deal with a terminally ill patient - How often are you with the attending when he/she
talks with a dying patient? - Junior residents 64 lt once/month
- Senior residents 43 lt once/month
20Special challenges for surgeons
- Hierarchical organizational structure may inhibit
discussion of controversial issues - Task-oriented people focused on doing rather
than feeling - Withdrawal of support issues may be linked, at
least emotionally, to prior actions of the surgeon
21Example 83 yo with critical AS
- Suffered stroke, became vent dependent following
elective valve replacement - Angry wife He was mowing the lawn and now you
made him a vegetable - Frustrated surgeon She just doesnt get it
it was a risk, but I thought it was a greater
risk not to operate. You know what critical AS
is like
22Challenges specific to difficult decisions
- Actions (stopping ventilator (or dialysis) are
discrete and clear - Discrete actions must occur in an environment of
uncertainty and ambiguity
HOWEVER..
23Uncertainty/ambiguity regarding
- What people want or (usually for the patient)
might have wanted - Outcomes not just that people will die but
- Actual time to death
- What it means to die or be dead
- Feelings
- What the right thing to do is (Ethics)
24What is required is...
Exquisite Competence
Not just basic understanding
25Summary Check-list
- Knowledge
- Ethics
- Proper drug use
- Accessing support systems
- Skills
- Drug utilization
- Communication
- Offering support to patient, family, staff
26Final words
- In historical terms ventilation and other forms
of life-support are recent innovations - As a society we have not caught up with such
innovations - Historically, for all specialties education in
palliative care in general has been sorely
lacking - We need to work hard to figure out how best to
incorporate needed training into existing
curricula