The earliest documentation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) dates to the Old
Testament, which describes how the prophet Elisha resuscitated an apparently dead child
by blowing air into his mouth.(
Modern CPR began in 1960 with the landmark study by Kouwenhoven, Jude, and
Knickerbocker, which reported combining closed chest compression, mouth-to-mouth
breathing, and external defibrillation.( Since that time, CPR and advanced cardiac life support (ACLS)
techniques have saved many lives but have also raised several ethical dilemmas. Consent
for CPR procedures is universally presumed. However, there are times when patients'
right to receive CPR contrasts with their caregivers' impression that such treatment is
not medically indicated. Conversely, some patients receive resuscitation that they would
not have wanted. Decisions regarding resuscitation and the duration of resuscitative
efforts often entail several crucial ethical issues. This article will focus on the
ethical dilemmas related to the need to make critical decisions in emergency or acute
settings.
Risks and benefits of resuscitative efforts
Since 1900, cardiovascular disease has been the leading cause of death.( Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is a
labor-intensive, high-cost endeavor, undertaken over an estimated 800,000 times
annually in the United States.(
Although reports on the survival from in-hospital and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
vary widely,( several factors have been identified to be associated
with outcome. The most important factor determining survival is the time elapsed
since arrest (down time).( Recent
studies estimate that the mortality rate increases 3% for each minute without CPR and
4% for each minute without defibrillation.( This public health
problem spawned the development of out-of-hospital cardiac care in the 1960s and its
continued growth to the present.( Risk-adjusted survival after
in-hospital cardiac arrest has significantly improved over the past
decade.( Several
epidemiological studies have identified factors associated with lower rates of
survival, including delays in defibrillation, off-hours or unwitnessed arrests.
Furthermore, substantial variation in survival outcomes exists across hospitals,
suggesting that some facilities may be instituting better strategies for
resuscitation care.(Early reports from emergency cardiac care systems documented that the most common
initial arrhythmias encountered in cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest were
ventricular fibrillation (VF) or ventricular tachycardia (VT).( Survival rates from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest range from 2%
to 26%, with the wide range ascribed to variations in the population
reported.( Ventricular
fibrillation and VT are "treatable" arrhythmias, and restoration of spontaneous
circulation is not unexpected; this is in contrast to the results of resuscitative
efforts when non-ventricular arrhythmias are encountered. The poor outcome of
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest caused by non-ventricular arrhythmias has led to both
renewed interest into the causes of such arrhythmias and in a reevaluation of
therapeutic interventions.( The historically dismal outcome of
these patients has led to suggestions that resuscitative interventions be withheld
from patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest who do not have rhythms that are
responsive to electrical cardioversion or counter shock.( However, patients who experience a witnessed
out-of-hospital arrest and who are found to be in asystole do not have a uniformly
fatal outcome.( In 1998, Stratton supported the practice of
initiating resuscitative efforts in patients found to be in asystole, particularly if
the collapse was witnessed.(
Improved outcomes have been demonstrated for witnessed arrests in which early CPR and
ACLS protocols were instituted.( The location is also an important
factor, largely owing to the more rapid institution of CPR for witnessed arrests
outside of the home.(The underlying medical condition of the patient is another important factor affecting
outcome.(Based on these data, several authors have suggested withholding resuscitative efforts
for patients in certain clinical settings with a low likelihood of successful
resuscitation (i.e., apneic, pulseless >10 minutes before EMS arrival, no response
to ACLS, asystole or pulseless electrical activity, absence of pupillary reactions,
preexisting terminal disease). Knowledge of data regarding resuscitation outcomes in
various clinical settings is crucial when one is making evidence-based decisions
regarding the risks and benefits of attempting CPR and ACLS.(
Ethics and cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was developed for acute illnesses, such as trauma or
myocardial infarctions. Actually, CPR is universal in application, regardless of the
underlying cause of the cardio-respiratory arrest. There is growing concern that a
disproportionate amount of health care budgets is spent on CPR and ACLS, particularly
when the results are viewed in light of the aging of our population and the high
percentage of deaths that occur in intensive care units. Additionally, several
authors have shown that physicians are unable to predict patient preferences
regarding treatment decisions.( Because of the inherent difficulties
in knowing the treatment preferences of an individual patient, resuscitative measures
are undertaken for most patients with cardiac arrest, unless a documented advance
directive exists.( The concern that CPR should be given
more appropriately to a selected number of patients who would certainly benefit from
it is a key problem in daily emergency physician practice. There is a widespread
belief that people with reduced quality of life due to chronic diseases do not want
aggressive, life-sustaining treatments, even in an emergency scenario.( By definition, the act of restoring life is a decision that must
be made rapidly by emergency physicians, and unfortunately it is often based on
suboptimal amounts of available information. In some countries, competent patients
have the right to refuse CPR in-hospital by using a code and outside the hospital by
wearing specific signs, such as a bracelet.The capacity to provide life-sustaining treatments, including CPR, has been
accompanied by several issues about how to make decisions regarding their use and how
to handle their cost.( The behaviors of emergency
physicians are frequently linked to their fear of litigation or criticism.( Several authors assume that physicians have no obligation to
provide, and patients and families have no right to demand, medical treatments that
are of no demonstrable benefit.( Respect for patient autonomy does
not require that the physician must initiate procedures that are medically futile or
not appropriate.( Until formal
policies are developed by governing organizations in emergency medicine, emergency
physicians must make the choices they judge to be most appropriate in the specific
critical situation encountered. Moreover, there is worldwide agreement over the need
to perform more selected and appropriate resuscitations because of the substantial
resources that are invested during and after CPR.( The
European Commission has ruled that the patient has the right of self-determination,
including the right to refuse unwanted therapies. However, it does not specify the
need to use advance directives or a proxy to achieve this goal in non-competent
patients. If physicians in Europe are going to use patient outcomes or quality of
life in the decision making process about whether or not to provide CPR, it is
important to have an appropriate understanding of the terminology. Quality of life
is, according to the WHO, a part of the definition of the word "health". According to
Curtis, it is "a holistic, self-determined evaluation of satisfaction with issues
important to the individual". All researchers confirm that it is influenced by many
factors, and, consequently, many authors use the more restrictive meaning of
"health-related quality of life". Patients with a lower current quality of life want
fewer life-sustaining therapies. Moreover, all patients receiving CPR, even if their
previous quality of life was not compromised, embrace the risk that if circulation is
restored, significant anoxic brain injury could result.
Appropriate care
The concept of medical futility became popular with the growth of high technology in
medical science, which created concern that this technology would simply delay death
for short periods rather than restore patients to health. Before 1987, the concept of
futility was unrecognized. In 1995, 134 articles on the topic were published, and in
1999, 31 new items were found in MedLine by searching for the keyword
"futility".( The term futility is fraught with
difficulties in its definition and interpretation. There is no consensus among
physicians about the definition of futility.( In fact, there are a variety of definitions, including
physiologic futility (failure to produce a physiologic response), quantitative
futility (the likelihood of benefit to the patient falls below a minimal threshold),
and patient-centered futility (failure to produce effects that the patient can
appreciate).(
Non-beneficial or having a low likelihood of success are the concepts most used in
futility discussions. Appropriate care is what ethicist are looking for, and it has
been identified by experts looking at the care provided in the ICU.( A treatment that does not improve
the patient's prognosis, comfort, well-being, or general state of health should be
considered futile, or even better, not appropriate. Healthcare practitioners may
interpret inappropriate interventions as those that carry an absolute impossibility
of a successful outcome, a low likelihood of success or survival, or a low
probability of restoration of a meaningful quality of life. Schneiderman defined
futility as "an effort to achieve a result that is possible but that reasoning or
experience suggests is highly improbable and cannot be systematically
produced".( The issues
surrounding CPR have been the primary stimulants for the discussion of medical
appropriateness. Among a group of European and Israeli ICU clinicians, perceptions of
inappropriate care were frequently reported and were inversely associated with
factors indicating good teamwork.( Physicians have no ethical obligations to offer disproportionate
or non-appropriate interventions to their patients because they can exercise their
professional judgment in assessing if a treatment request is appropriate to reach a
therapeutic goal. If requests are not reasonable, the physician should not feel
obliged to provide them(;
furthermore, given limited resources, it is ethically justifiable to limit access to
treatments that are expensive and offer minimal benefit.( Decisions about appropriateness involve moral
judgments about right or good care.(The lack of knowledge of ethics and laws is likely to exert a cautionary influence
and create exaggerated concerns about ethical and legal liability. In 1996,
physicians working in California offered CPR to all patients, regardless of acquired
benefits and despite a hospital policy that allowed them to not offer cardiopulmonary
resuscitation to everyone. Most of the 69 intensivists interviewed believed that CPR
should be offered to all patients. However, ethicists have argued that CPR should not
to be given to patients who are unlikely to benefit.( Physicians experience considerable uncertainty about
what is and is not ethically and legally permissible.( A valid
legal reason to withhold CPR and ACLS measures is a clearly written advanced
directive that states the wishes of the patient or the determination of the primary
physician that resuscitation is neither desired nor appropriate. Unfortunately, this
is not a standard of practice in Europe, especially in Southern European
countries.
CONCLUSION
Decisions regarding resuscitation and the duration of resuscitative efforts are commonly
encountered aspects of emergency medicine and often entail several crucial ethical
issues. Positive and negative consequences should be carefully considered when making
such decisions. More research is needed on the effects and benefits of cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. Cost containment is needed, and the appropriate use of medical resources
is a goal of emergency medicine. Particular attention should be paid to the well-being
of the survivors.
Authors: Robert Ruemmler; Alexander Ziebart; Frances Kuropka; Bastian Duenges; Jens Kamuf; Andreas Garcia-Bardon; Erik K Hartmann Journal: PeerJ Date: 2020-04-29 Impact factor: 2.984