| Literature DB >> 30646015 |
Tessie W October1,2, Zoelle B Dizon2, Robert M Arnold3, Abby R Rosenberg4,5,6.
Abstract
Importance: Pediatric intensive care unit care conferences often involve high-stakes decisions regarding critically ill children, resulting in strong family emotions. Families often report the need for physician empathy. Objective: To evaluate the characteristics of physician empathetic statements during pediatric intensive care unit care conferences. Design, Setting, and Participants: In this single-center, cross-sectional, qualitative phenomenology study, 68 transcripts of audio-recorded care conferences were analyzed from an urban, quaternary medical center from January 3, 2013, to January 5, 2017. Thirty physicians and 179 family members of 68 children participated in care conferences. Data analysis was conducted from June 5, 2017, to October 12, 2017. Main Outcomes and Measures: A qualitative thematic analysis was conducted to code physician empathetic statements and family's responses to these statements. Empathetic statements were classified using the previously published NURSE pneumonic (naming, understanding, respecting, supporting, exploring) and coded as unburied (statement followed by a pause allowing the family time to respond) or buried (empathetic statement encased in medical talk or terminated with a closed-ended statement). Family responses were categorized into 3 themes: alliance (emotion continued), cognitive (medical talk), or none. Missed opportunities for physicians to respond with empathy were identified.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30646015 PMCID: PMC6324292 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.0351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Thematic Categories of Family Responses to Physician Empathetic Statements
| Category of Family Response | Definition of Category | Sample Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Alliance response | ||
| Deepen emotional discussion | Family shares their hopes and fears | Physician: |
| Express gratitude | Family expresses thanks for the care or concern from the physician | Physician: |
| Agreement with physician | Family statement aligns with the physician’s statement | Family: I agree. I think that talking to the tracheostomy nurse would be a good idea. |
| Express mourning | Family becomes tearful or asks for a moment to collect themselves | Family: [family crying] |
| Cognitive response | Family asks a medical question or makes a statement continuing the medical talk, ignoring the empathetic statement | Physician: |
| No response | Conversation ends without a response from the family because the physician asked closed-ended question or a member of the health care team interrupted prior to a family response | Physician: |
The empathetic physician statement is italicized in the sample quotes.
Demographic Characteristics
| Characteristic | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients (n = 68) | Family Members (n = 179) | Physicians (n = 30) | |
| Male | 41 (60) | 77 (43) | 13 (43) |
| Age, median (IQR), mo | 42.5 (14.8-120.0) | ND | ND |
| Race | |||
| Black | 43 (64) | 108 (60) | 2 (7) |
| White | 15 (22) | 43 (24) | 24 (80) |
| Asian | 3 (4) | 6 (4) | 2 (7) |
| Other | 7 (10) | 22 (12) | 2 (7) |
| Diagnosis | |||
| Hematologic/oncologic | 15 (22) | NA | NA |
| Respiratory | 14 (21) | NA | NA |
| Neurologic | 13 (19) | NA | NA |
| Congenital/genetic | 11 (16) | NA | NA |
| Shock/trauma | 8 (12) | NA | NA |
| Other | 7 (10) | NA | NA |
| Treatment decision discussed | |||
| Tracheostomy | 30 (44) | NA | NA |
| Overall goals of care | 13 (19) | NA | NA |
| Surgical procedure | 10 (15) | NA | NA |
| Medical treatment | 9 (13) | NA | NA |
| Withdrawal of technical support | 6 (9) | NA | NA |
| Disposition | |||
| Home | 29 (43) | NA | NA |
| Rehabilitation/subacute facility | 19 (28) | NA | NA |
| Deceased | 15 (22) | NA | NA |
| Other hospital | 4 (6) | NA | NA |
| Hospice | 1 (1) | NA | NA |
| Relationship to patient | |||
| Mother | NA | 67 (37) | NA |
| Father | NA | 50 (28) | NA |
| Other family member | NA | 62 (35) | NA |
| Medical specialty | |||
| Critical care | NA | NA | 10 (33) |
| Hematology/oncology | NA | NA | 7 (23) |
| Neurology | NA | NA | 2 (7) |
| Pulmonology | NA | NA | 2 (7) |
| Genetics | NA | NA | 2 (7) |
| Surgery | NA | NA | 2 (7) |
| Other | NA | NA | 5 (17) |
| Years of practice, y | |||
| <5 | NA | NA | 6 (20) |
| >5 | NA | NA | 24 (80) |
Abbreviations: IQR, interquartile range; NA, not applicable; ND, data not collected.
Other represents 1 physician in each of the following specialties: cardiology, complex care, nephrology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and primary care.
Empathetic Statements Made by Physicians Using the NURSE Pneumonic to Respond to Family Emotions
| Type of NURSE Statement | Definition | Statements, No. (%) (n = 364) | Sample Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Naming | Name the family’s emotion | 48 (13) | It sounds like you were anxious because you didn’t feel there was as much attention given. |
| Understanding | Empathize with and acknowledge the family’s emotional response | 110 (30) | I completely understand. This has to be the hardest thing you’ve ever gone through. |
| Respecting | Praise the family for their expert role in their child’s care | 90 (25) | You guys have been remarkably ahead of us in everything. |
| Supporting | Demonstrate support of the family’s needs and/or decisions | 83 (23) | There’s no right answer here, they are just both very hard. We are here to support you. If there’s any way we can help you, we’ll be there. |
| Exploring | Ask the family to elaborate their feelings, concerns, or hopes | 33 (9) | Dad, I’ve been talking more to Mom because she’s sitting across from me, and I apologize for that—what are your thoughts? |
Abbreviation: NURSE, naming, understanding, respecting, supporting, exploring.
Categories of Buried Empathetic Statements by Physicians
| Category of Buried Empathy | Definition | Statements, No. (%) (n = 140) | Sample Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical talk | 133 (95) | ||
| Additional data | Empathetic statement buried within >2 sentences of medical text or information giving, such as orientation, instructions | 72 (54) | Physician: |
| But | Empathetic statement connected with a “but” to medical talk | 34 (26) | Physician: No one has a crystal ball, and |
| Second physician | Consultant or other health care team member speaks next, not leaving time for silence or parent response | 27 (20) | Physician 1: |
| Closed | Empathetic statement followed by a closed-ended question | 7 (5) | Physician: |
Abbreviation: ICU, intensive care unit.
The empathetic physician statement is italicized in the sample quotes.
Family Responses to Physician Unburied and Buried Empathetic Statements
| Family Response Theme | No. (%) | Odds Ratio (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unburied Empathy (n = 224) | Buried Empathy (n = 140) | |||
| Alliance response | 160 (71) | 17 (12) | ||
| Deepen | 95 (59) | 11 (65) | <.001 | 18 (10.1-32.4) |
| Gratitude | 26 (16) | 1 (6) | ||
| Agreement | 25 (16) | 5 (29) | ||
| Mourning | 14 (9) | 0 (0) | ||
| Cognitive response | 57 (26) | 69 (49) | NA | NA |
| No response | 7 (3) | 54 (39) | NA | NA |
Abbreviation: NA, not applicable.
Differences between family responses to physician buried vs unburied empathetic statements were calculated using Pearson χ2 analysis with 2-sided α of .05.