Literature DB >> 20194809

End-of-life decision making in the intensive care unit.

John M Luce1.   

Abstract

Increasingly in the United States and other countries, medical decisions, including those at the end of life, are made using a shared decision-making model. Under this model, physicians and other clinicians help patients clarify their values and reach consensus about treatment courses consistent with them. Because most critically ill patients are decisionally impaired, family members and other surrogates must make end-of-life decisions for them, ideally in accord with a substituted judgment standard. Physicians generally make decisions for patients who lack families or other surrogates and have no advance directives, based on a best interests standard and occasionally in consultation with other physicians or with review by a hospital ethics committee. End-of-life decisions for patients with surrogates usually are made at family conferences, the functioning of which can be improved by several methods that have been demonstrated to improve communications. Facilitative ethics consultations can be helpful in resolving conflicts when physicians and families disagree in end-of-life decisions. Ethics committees actually are allowed to make such decisions in one state when disagreements cannot be resolved otherwise.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20194809     DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201001-0071CI

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med        ISSN: 1073-449X            Impact factor:   21.405


  28 in total

1.  Association between education in EOL care and variability in EOL practice: a survey of ICU physicians.

Authors:  Daniel Neves Forte; Jean Louis Vincent; Irineu Tadeu Velasco; Marcelo Park
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2012-01-06       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 2.  [Decision conflicts with relatives in the intensive care unit].

Authors:  M Ratliff; J-O Neumann
Journal:  Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed       Date:  2015-10-29       Impact factor: 0.840

Review 3.  [Ethics consultations in intensive care medicine].

Authors:  T Bein; B M Graf
Journal:  Anaesthesist       Date:  2012-01       Impact factor: 1.041

Review 4.  What are the ethical questions raised by the integration of intensive care into advance care planning?

Authors:  Jean-Pierre Quenot; Fiona Ecarnot; Nicolas Meunier-Beillard; Auguste Dargent; Audrey Large; Pascal Andreu; Jean-Philippe Rigaud
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2017-12

5.  Do physicians disclose uncertainty when discussing prognosis in grave critical illness?

Authors:  Rachel A Schuster; Seo Yeon Hong; Robert M Arnold; Douglas B White
Journal:  Narrat Inq Bioeth       Date:  2012

6.  [Take a position on changes in therapy aims and limiting therapy: Actio moralis practiced in intensive care medicine].

Authors:  T Bein
Journal:  Anaesthesist       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 1.041

Review 7.  [Patients, physicians and nursing personnel in intensive care units: Psychological and psychotherapeutic interventions].

Authors:  V Meraner; B Sperner-Unterweger
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 1.214

8.  Family members' informal roles in end-of-life decision making in adult intensive care units.

Authors:  Jill R Quinn; Madeline Schmitt; Judith Gedney Baggs; Sally A Norton; Mary T Dombeck; Craig R Sellers
Journal:  Am J Crit Care       Date:  2012-01       Impact factor: 2.228

9.  How Surrogates Decide: A Secondary Data Analysis of Decision-Making Principles Used by the Surrogates of Hospitalized Older Adults.

Authors:  Rohit Devnani; James E Slaven; Gabriel T Bosslet; Kianna Montz; Lev Inger; Emily S Burke; Alexia M Torke
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2017-08-24       Impact factor: 5.128

10.  [End-of life decisions in intensive care units. Influence of patient wishes on therapeutic decision making].

Authors:  R Riessen; C Bantlin; U Wiesing; M Haap
Journal:  Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed       Date:  2013-03-17       Impact factor: 0.840

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