| Literature DB >> 30872542 |
Rebecca Nowland1, Sarah Steeg1, Leah M Quinlivan1,2, Jayne Cooper1, Richard Huxtable3, Keith Hawton4, David Gunnell5, Neil Allen6, Kevin Mackway-Jones7, Navneet Kapur1,2,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of advance care planning and advance decisions for psychiatric care is growing. However, there is limited guidance on clinical management when a patient presents with suicidal behaviour and an advance decision and no systematic reviews of the extant literature.Entities:
Keywords: Ulysses directives; advance decisions; advance directives; living wills; self-harm; suicidal behaviour
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30872542 PMCID: PMC6429970 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Search terms for each topic
| Advance directives |
| Mental capacity |
| Suicidal behaviour |
| advance decisions | mental competency | suicide |
Criteria for inclusion and exclusion
| Parameter | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| Patients | Patients over 18 years who present to hospital with advance decisions* (also include do not resuscitate orders, DNRs) following suicidal behaviour (including attempted suicide, deliberate self-harm, self-injurious behaviour, drug overdose, self-poisoning, self-destructive behaviour) with no existing chronic or terminal physical conditions. | Patients who present to hospital with advance decisions but with primary conditions which were not mental health related (eg, HIV/AIDS, chronic physical health conditions or disabilities, neurodegenerative diseases and/or specific patient groups (eg, mother/baby)). |
| Intervention | Medical management and/or medicolegal and/or ethical consultation/discussion. | Medical management of euthanasia, assisted suicide, end of life, wills/inheritance (ie, monetary or property issues). |
| Comparator | ||
| Outcomes | Adherence/non-adherence with advance decision, treatment, patient outcome (ie, death). | |
| Study design | Opinion and review articles, case studies, empirical studies/surveys. | Book reviews, responses to articles, conference abstracts. |
*Or other terms such as advance decisions, advance directives, advance statement, living will(s), mental health directive, Ulysses contract(s), psychiatric will(s), mental competency, mental capacity, healthcare power of attorney, antecedent decision/wish, pre-emptive suicide, antecedent refusal, resuscitation order or living will, advance directive, Ulysses contract.
Figure 1Flow chart of results from initial search. AD, advance decision.
Description of selected studies
| Author | Date | Country | Perspective* | Fictional/factual case | Case reported† |
| Bryne | 2002 | Australia | Nursing | Fictional | – |
| Callaghan and Ryan | 2011 | Australia | Bioethics | Factual | A |
| Chalfin | 2001 | USA, Philadelphia, New York, New Zealand | Emergency and acute medicine/bioethics | Factual | B |
| Cook | 2010 | USA, Illinois | Psychiatry | Factual | C |
| Dresser | 2010 | USA, New York | Legal | Factual | A |
| David | 2010 | UK | Psychiatry | Factual | A |
| Frank | 2013 | USA, Colorado | Legal | Factual | D |
| Kapur | 2010 | UK | Psychiatry | Factual | E |
| Mitchell | 2011 | USA, San Diego | Ethical | Fictional | – |
| Muzaffer | 2011 | UK | Psychiatry | Factual | A |
| Richardson | 2013 | UK | Legal | Factual | A |
| Ryan and Callaghan | 2010 | Australia | Psychiatry | Factual | A |
| Sontheimer | 2008 | USA, Springfield | Bioethics | Factual | E |
| Szawarski | 2013 | UK | Bioethics | Factual | A |
| Volpe | 2012 | USA, New York | Bioethics | Factual | F |
*Where the perspective is not clearly stated, this has been derived from the author(s) background and professional experience.
†For specific details about each case, see table 4. Note: fictional cases have not been given a case report ID.
Description of clinical cases discussed in selected studies
| Case | Reference | Age | Mental health conditions | Nature of SA | Resulting injuries/illness | Hospital admittance | Nature of the AD | When written? | Patient conscious? | Decision-making process | Rationale for decision | Outcome |
| A |
| 26 | Depression generalised anxiety disorder, PTSD, BPD | Self-poisoning (antifreeze) | Not stated | Presented herself at hospital | Letter | 3 days prior | Yes | Medical staff discussed the patient’s mental capacity and sought legal advice. | The patient’s wishes were clear in the letter but the patient was conscious, judged to have capacity and refusing treatment. | Death |
| B |
| 46 | Severe depression | Gunshot to face | Pain and severe facial injury | Gunshot reported by neighbours | Suicide note | Not stated | Yes (not coherent) | The attending physicians thought life-support should be removed as the patient’s ‘will’ was clear and authoritative. The psychiatrist thought suicide was pathological and the condition was treatable so the patient should be treated. Clinicians consulted widely and sought legal advice. | The suicide note was accepted as a living will. The patient had a desire to die due to psychological pain. The suicide attempt left the patient in a severely disabled state. | Death |
| C |
| 57 | Depression generalised anxiety disorder, PTSD, BPD | Self-poisoning (opiates) | Respiratory distress | Psychiatric inpatient | DNR | Prior to inpatient admittance | Not stated | There was conflict between clinicians; the psychiatrist argued that the DNR should not be followed because it was a suicide attempt. The legal/ethics committee was consulted who supported continued treatment. | DNR considered an effort to prepare for a suicide attempt and should not be honoured. | Survived and regretted the suicide attempt. |
| D |
| 35 | Depression and drug abuse | Hanging | Brain injury | Found by family | AD | Not stated | No | There were concerns that adherence to the AD would result in the patient’s death. Clinicians sought legal advice. | The patient had poor prognosis and the family gave consent for clinicians to stop treatment. | Death |
| E |
| 52 | Depression generalised anxiety disorder, PTSD, BPD | Self-poisoning (insulin) | Coma | Found at home | AD | 2 years prior | No | The AD mentioned no treatment for a terminal condition. The patient was not in a terminal condition and there were concerns that injury was the result of a suicide attempt and whether the AD should be adhered to in a suicidal context. Approached family and held an ethics committee consultation. | The patient’s wishes were judged to be clear, the patient was considered to be informed about treatment options and had mental capacity at the time of writing the AD and the family were in agreement. | Death |
| F |
| 86 | Not stated | Gunshot to chest | Damage to pancreas and colon | Not stated | AD | Not stated | Yes (not always coherent) | Medical team argue that the nature in which the physical condition was caused (ie, suicidal behaviour) should impact on treatment. | Not stated | Not stated |
For details about articles, see table 3.
AD, advance directive; BPD, borderline personality disorder; DNR, do not resuscitate; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder; SA, suicide attempt.
Themes from the selected articles
| Theme | Subthemes | Theme descriptor | Perspectives | References | Count (%) |
| Tension between patient autonomy and protecting a vulnerable person. |
| Tension between acting in accordance with patients’ wishes for their medical treatment while promoting their best interests presented clinicians with a professional ethical dilemma. Clinicians also had a personal ethical dilemma, as there is societal pressure to protect vulnerable people and prevent suicide. | Psychiatry, bioethics, legal. |
| 5 (33) |
| Appropriateness of advance decisions for suicidal behaviour. |
| There were questions about whether an advance decision ‘fits’ in relation to suicide without an existing physical illness because mental state, mental health and suicide ideation fluctuate. Such scenarios are different from decisions made about treatment for a chronic or terminal physical condition. | Medical, psychiatry, bioethics, legal. |
| 12 (80) |
| Uncertainty about the application of legislation. |
| Legislation around advance decisions was seen as confusing and there was anxiety about ligation. It was noted that mental capacity legislation overlapped with mental health legislation and policy. There were concerns that relying on a capacity decision was not sufficient and the authenticity of the advance decision needed to be considered. | Medical, psychiatry, bioethics, legal. |
| 11 (73) |
| The length of time needed to consider all the evidence versus rapid decision-making for treatment. |
| Clinical decisions were considered to be complex, involving an assessment of mental capacity, verification of the advance decision and consideration of contextual factors. Therefore sufficient time was needed in which to consider all of the evidence. | Medical, psychiatry, bioethics, |
| 5 (33) |
| Importance of seeking support and sharing the decision. |
| Sharing the decision-making and seeking support, both at the time of writing the advance decision and when treating the patient, was viewed as important. | Medical, psychiatry, bioethics, legal. |
| 9 (60) |