Literature DB >> 19307508

Patient involvement in decisions to limit treatment: the crucial role of agreement between physician and patient.

Eva C Winkler1, Stella Reiter-Theil, Dorothee Lange-Riess, Nina Schmahl-Menges, Wolfgang Hiddemann.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to describe, first, the decision-making process concerning the limitation of life-prolonging treatment (DLT); second, the extent to which patients are actually involved in these decisions; and third, to detect medical and ethical factors that affect patient involvement. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This prospective qualitative study enrolled 76 patients with incurable cancer with whom the limitation of life-prolonging treatment was discussed. Embedded researchers on the wards recorded the patient's history, medical condition, type of treatment limitation discussed, patient wishes, decision-making capacity, and patient involvement using an in-depth documentation procedure.
RESULTS: While the majority of patients were informed about their diagnosis, therapy, and course of disease (99%, 97%, 90%, respectively), only 47% were involved in DLT. Two thirds of the patients preferred palliative care, and one third wished to extend their lifetime. If patients preferred palliative care, they were more often in line with physicians' treatment goals than patients who were striving for longer survival (91.4% v 46.7%; P = .001). They also were involved significantly more often in DLT. Multivariate analysis showed that age, Karnofsky performance index or decision-making capacity had no impact on patient involvement.
CONCLUSION: Only half of the patients were involved in DLT. Surprisingly, the main predictor of patient involvement was not their medical condition, but agreement with physicians' palliative treatment goals. These results show that if physicians switch to comfort care in terminally ill patients and patients are not yet prepared to follow this line, treatment limitations are often decided without involving the patient.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19307508     DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2008.17.9515

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Oncol        ISSN: 0732-183X            Impact factor:   44.544


  26 in total

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8.  Health economics of a palliative care unit for terminal cancer patients: a retrospective cohort study.

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9.  Framework for timing of the discussion about forgoing cancer-specific treatment based on a qualitative study with oncologists.

Authors:  K Laryionava; P Heußner; W Hiddemann; E C Winkler
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10.  Care Consistency With Documented Care Preferences: Methodologic Considerations for Implementing the "Measuring What Matters" Quality Indicator.

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