| Literature DB >> 29370767 |
Jeroen F A M Janssens1,2, Susanne J de Kort3, Wilco P Achterberg4, Susan Kurrle5, Ngaire Kerse6, Ian D Cameron7, Dorothea P Touwen8.
Abstract
In health care for older adults, patients with multimorbidity usually receive the same interventions as those patients without multimorbidity. However, standard curative or life-sustaining treatment options have to be considered carefully in view of the maximally attainable result in older and frail patients. To guide such complex medical decisions, we present a compact deliberation framework that could assist physician(s) in charge of the medical treatment of a specific elderly patient to systematize his own thinking about treatment and decisional responsibilities, in case of an intercurrent disease.The framework includes four questions to be addressed when deciding on a single urgent standard curative or life-sustaining intervention in acute medical problems of an elderly patient with multimorbidity: 1) What is known about the patient's aims and preferences? 2) Will the intervention be effective? 3) Will the intervention support the aims and preferences of the patient? 4) In view of the aims and preferences, will the risks and benefits be in balance?If all four considerations are answered favorably, the intervention will fit patient-centered and appropriate care for frail older patients with multimorbidity.Application to a patient case illustrates how our framework can improve the quality of the shared decision-making process in care for older people and helps clarify medical and moral considerations regarding how to appropriately treat the individual patient.Entities:
Keywords: Elderly; Intercurrent disease; Medical decision; Multimorbidity; Shared decision making
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29370767 PMCID: PMC5785799 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-018-0707-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Compact Deliberation Framework applied to Mrs. W
| Question | Answer concerning Mrs. W. | Final say |
|---|---|---|
| What is known about the patient’s aims and preferences? | • Urge to walk and to move freely | Mrs. W. and Mrs. W.’s daughter in the function of proxy decision maker |
| Will the (surgical) intervention be effective? | • Operating hip fracture in a patient with dementia has a bad prognosis [ | Physician |
| Will the intervention support the aims and preferences of the patient? | • Little chance she will be able to walk independently | Mrs. W.’s daughter in the function of proxy decision maker |
| In view of the aims and preferences, will the risks and benefits be in balance? | • In close contact with her proxy decision maker it was decided that the risks and benefits are not in balance since Mrs. W.’s most important wish to return to her former life as non-demented person, is impossible to achieve | Physician together with Mrs. W.’s daughter in the function of proxy decision maker |