| Literature DB >> 28050241 |
Maryam Aghabarary1, Nahid Dehghan Nayeri2.
Abstract
Concerns over limited medical equipment and resources, particularly in intensive care units (ICUs), have raised the issue of medical futility. Medical futility draws a contrast between physician's authority and patients' autonomy and it is one of the major issues of end-of-life ethical decision-making. The aim of this study was to review medical futility and its challenges. In this systematized review study, a comprehensive search of the existing literature was performed using an internet search with broad keywords to access related articles in both Persian and English databases. Finally, 89 articles were selected and surveyed. Medical futility is a complex, ambiguous, subjective, situation-specific, value-laden, and goal-dependent concept which is almost always surrounded by some degrees of uncertainty; hence, there is no objective and valid criterion for its determination. This concept is affected by many different factors such as physicians' and patients' value systems, medical goals, and sociocultural and religious context, and individuals' emotions and personal characteristics. It is difficult to achieve a clear consensus over the concept of medical futility; hence, it should be defined and determined at an individual level and based on the unique condition of each patient.Entities:
Keywords: Decision-making; Medical futility; Physiologic futility; Qualitative futility; Withholding of treatments
Year: 2016 PMID: 28050241 PMCID: PMC5203684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Ethics Hist Med ISSN: 2008-0387
Figure 1The process of searching, retrieving, and selecting the documents
The definitions of the concept of medical futility in the literature
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| 1 | Medical futility | Quantitative medical futility: “When physicians conclude (either through personal experience, experiences shared with colleagues, or consideration of published empiric data) that in the last 100 cases a medical treatment has been useless, they should regard that treatment as futile” (p.437). | Schneiderman et al. |
| 2 | Medical futility | Medical futility “is when treatment cannot, within a reasonable probability, cure, ameliorate, improve or restore a quality of life that would be satisfactory to the patient” (p.36). | Quinn |
| 3 | Medical futility | Quantitative medical futility is related to the success of a treatment in achieving its intended goals. | Schneiderman et al. |
| 4 | Medical futility | “An action, intervention or procedure that might be physiologically effective in a given case but cannot benefit the patient, no matter how often it is repeated. A futile treatment is not necessarily ineffective, but it is worthless either because the medical action itself is futile, (no matter what the patient s condition) or the condition of the patient makes it futile” (p.69). | Clark |
| 5 | Medical futility | The concept needs to be defined individually and based on the unique condition of each patient and the desires of the patient and family members: Continuing treatments while death is certain and survival is impossible Continuing treatments while post-survival QOL is low (because of permanent physical or cognitive damage) Continuing treatments for a patient with brain death | Heland |
| 6 | Medical futility | The concept needs to be defined individually and based on the unique condition of each patient: | Aramesh |
| 7 | Medical futility | Medical futility at the end of life includes the following instances: Failure to achieve goals such as saving life, prolonging life, and improving QOL Disproportionate harm-benefit ratio: imposing heavy costs or inflicting harm The concept needs to be defined individually and based on the unique condition of each patient | Jox et al. |
| 8 | Medical futility | The concept needs to be defined individually and based on the unique condition of each patient: | Saettele and Kras |
| 9 | Futile treatment | In the context of medicine, futile treatment is a type of care which does not fulfill the intended goals and includes: A treatment which does not provide a reasonable chance of survival A treatment which is useless or ineffective A treatment which is unsuccessful at enhancing QOL or medical utility A treatment which can never fulfill the patient’s goals | Jecker et al. |
| 10 | Futility/Futile care | Treatment is medically futile or non-beneficial because it offers no reasonable hope of recovery or improvement, or because the patient is permanently unable to experience any benefit. | Jones and Hunter ( |
| 11 | Futile treatment | “Treatments that offer no physiological benefits to the patient are futile” (p.888). | Danis et al. |
| 12 | Futility/Futile care | Futility is a complex concept which relates to achieving and fulfilling the intended goals. An action is considered futile once it cannot achieve its intended goals or its success is empirically improbable. | Meltzer and Huckabay |
| 13 | Futile care | “Medically futile care to mean the use of considerable resources without a reasonable hope that the patient would recover to a state of relative independence or be interactive with his or her environment” (p.1201). | Sibbald et al. |
| 14 | Futile care | Futile care “consists giving clinical cares irrelevant to a nurse’s job and giving cares through which the return of patient would be impossible both physiologically and qualitatively” (p.301). | Bahramnezhad et al. |
| 15 | Futile care | Futile care “is useless, ineffective care giving with wastage of resources and torment of both patients and nurses having nursing and medical aspects” (p. 235). | Yekefallah et al. |
The types and the examples of medical futility
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| Strict physiologic futility | Treatments do not produce the intended physiological effect | ∆ Ineffectiveness of an antibiotic against viral infection |
| Quantitative futility | The chance of producing the desired effects is low or poor (less than 1%). | ∆ The low success rate of saving the life of an elderly patient who suffers from end-stage hepatic cirrhosis and severe organ failure |
| Qualitative futility | Treatments which have the desired physiological effects, but the effects are useless or worthless to the intended patient | ∆ A successful resuscitation which finally results in a vegetative state for the patient |
Comparing quantitative and qualitative futility
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| ∆ Physiologic futility | ∆ Normative futility |
| Points to the probability of producing physiological effects | Points to the value of achieving a certain goal |
| Requires medical knowledge to decide upon continuation or discontinuation of treatments | Requires knowing patients’ and their family members’ values and beliefs to decide upon continuation or discontinuation of treatments |
Patient-related/disease-related conditions which affect perceptions of medical futility
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Total brain death (cortex, medulla, and cerebellum). Partial brain death (cortex, medulla, or cerebellum). |
The patient will die in the near future (within several hours or days) irrespective of treatments. A terminally-ill patient A dying patient Premature babies with fatal congenital defects (will die within several hours after birth). |
The patient is suffering from an underlying condition which will cause a premature death despite receiving treatments A patient with poor prognosis A patient with end-stage disease A patient with metastatic cancer |
Patients with stable vegetative state Very old patients suffering from multiple conditions and organ failure Very old patients suffering from advanced dementia Permanent unconsciousness Patient’s dependence on life-sustaining equipment, devices, and medications |