| Literature DB >> 25520825 |
Jun Makino1, Shigeki Fujitani2, Bridget Twohig1, Steven Krasnica1, John Oropello1.
Abstract
In Japan, the continuation of critical care at the end of life is a common practice due to the threat of legal action against physicians that may choose a palliative care approach. This is beginning to change due to public debate related to a series of controversial incidents concerning end-of-life care over the last decade. In this review we contrast and compare the history and evolution of end-of-life care in Japan vs. the USA and other Asian countries. Efforts by the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine (JSICM) to establish better end-of-life care systems, as well as future directions in palliative care in Japan, are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Advance directive; Asian countries; East; End-of-life; ICU; Japan; Living will; Palliative care; USA
Year: 2014 PMID: 25520825 PMCID: PMC4267582 DOI: 10.1186/2052-0492-2-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
International comparison of the ratio of physicians to patients and the number of ICU beds
| Country | Ratio of physicians to patients (per 1,000 population)[ | Number of ICU beds (per 100,000 population)[ |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | 3.7 | 24.6 |
| France | 3.3 | 9.3 |
| England | 2.7 | 3.3 |
| USA | 2.4 | 20 |
| Canada | 2.4 | 13.5 |
| Japan | 2.2 | 4 to 5 |
Major historical events in end-of-life care in the USA [11,12]
| Year | Name of case | Issues | Importance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1914 | Schloendorff vs. Society of New York Hospitals | Surgical intervention was performed despite withholding of consent by a patient | Competent patients have a right to determine their therapeutic intervention and informed consent is required before the intervention |
| 1969 | The concept of living will was introduced by Luis Kutner, an Illinois lawyer | ||
| 1976 | Karen Quinlan | Withdrawal of mechanical ventilation from a patient in a vegetative state | Competent patients have a right to refuse interventions, and this can be applied by surrogates under the principle of substantial judgment if a patient becomes incompetent |
| 1976 | California State | - | The Natural Death Act allowed withdrawal of life-sustaining support |
| 1983 | Barber vs. Superior Court | Withdrawal of mechanical ventilation from a vegetative patient at the request of the patient's family | Surrogates can refuse interventions on behalf of patients, based on the patient's best interests |
| 1985 | Claire Conroy | The right of a patients' guardian to stop artificial nutrition | Treatment that does not benefit or causes harm to the patient should not be continued based on humanitarian reasons in situations where the patient's wishes for end-of-life care are not known |
| 1990 | Cruzan vs. the Missouri Department of Health | Withdrawal of care from an incompetent patient who had prior wishes | States can set the level of evidence required to determine the prior wishes of incompetent patients with which surrogate decisions are made. |
| 1990 | US government | - | The Patient Self-Determination Act obligated medical insurance organization and medical facilities to update the status of advance directives in patient's medical charts on admission to hospice, hospital or nursing home |
| 2005 | Terri Schiavo case | How to define family and how to proceed with end-of-life care decisions if members of the immediate family are not in agreement | The US District Court in Florida denied the emergency request signed by the US President to reinsert the feeding tube |
Five wishes advance directive (adopted by 42 states in the USA)[18]
| Wish | |
|---|---|
| 1 | The person I want to make care decisions for me when I can't |
| 2 | The kind of medical treatment I want or don't want |
| 3 | How comfortable I want to be |
| 4 | How I want people to treat me |
| 5 | What I want my loved ones to know |
Major historical events in end-of-life care in Japan[19, 20]
| Year | Name of hospital | Issues | Importance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Tokai University Hospital | Administration of potassium chloride to ease a patient's respiratory discomfort at the request of the patient's family | Withholding or withdrawal of care is applied when the following condition fits: |
| 1. A patient is terminally ill and death is inevitable | |||
| 2. Living will or advance directive exists at the time of end-of-life decision | |||
| 3. Mechanical ventilation, dialysis, medication, blood transfusion, medication, and artificial nutrition are targets of withholding or withdrawal of care | |||
| A living will or an advance directive by the patient did not exist and the surrogate decision in the setting of poor understanding of the patient's condition was not appropriate to determine the patient's end-of-life care | Euthanasia was established to be illegal. A physician was sentenced 2 years in prison | ||
| 1998 | Kawasaki Kyodo Hospital | Withdrawal of endotracheal tube and administration of neuromuscular blockade for respiratory discomfort | Withdrawal of care in this situation was not legally indicated; however, the Supreme Court did not cite a specific norm when withholding or withdrawal of care is applied |
| Confirming poor recovery or prognosis 2 weeks after the insult was too early without clinical evidence (e.g., electroencephalogram) | A physician was sentenced 1 1/2 years in prison | ||
| Withdrawal of care requested by the patient's family was performed without providing appropriate information about the patient's prognosis | |||
| 2004 | Hokkaido Haboro Hospital | Withdrawal of mechanical ventilation without confirmation of brain death or informed consent | The physician was not prosecuted because subsequent investigation concluded that the patient would have died shortly even with ventilator support |
| 2006 | Imizu Civil Hospital | Seven deaths after withdrawal of mechanical ventilation was investigated | The physician was not prosecuted because of insufficient evidence to prove the relationship between ventilator withdrawal and the patients' deaths |
| 2006 | Wakayama Medical University Hospital | Withdrawal of mechanical ventilation from a brain-dead patient at the request of the patient's family | Physicians and the hospital were exempted from prosecution |
| 2006-2009 | - | - | End-of-life care guidelines were developed by a variety of societies |
| 2009 | Fukuoka University Hospital | Withdrawal of percutaneous cardiopulmonary support (PCPS) as requested by the patient's family | The treatment team withdrew PCPS according to the 2007 end-of-life guideline and the team was not prosecuted |
Major end-of-life guidelines in ICU setting in Japan
| Date of issue | Society | Pattern | Contents |
|---|---|---|---|
| August 2006 | The Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine | Acute: critical care | Nature of terminal care of critically ill patients in intensive care |
| May 2007 | The Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare | General | Decision-making process of end-of-life care |
| November 2007 | The Japanese Association for Acute Medicine | Acute: emergency | End-of-life care in the setting of emergency medicine |
| 2010 | The Japanese Circulation Society | Chronic: cardiac | Statement for end-stage cardiovascular care |