| Literature DB >> 32368347 |
Susan Ireland1,2, Sarah Larkins2, Robin Ray2, Lynn Woodward2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Extremely preterm babies are at risk of significant mortality and morbidity due to their physiological immaturity. At periviable gestations decisions may be made to either provide resuscitation and intensive care or palliation based on assessment of the outlook for the baby and the parental preferences. Health care professionals (HCP) who counsel parents will influence decision making depending on their individual perceptions of the outcome for the baby. This paper aims to explore the knowledge and attitudes towards extremely preterm babies of HCP who care for women in pregnancy in a tertiary, regional and remote setting in North Queensland.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Decision-making; Extreme prematurity; Morbidity; Mortality; Outcomes; Resuscitation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32368347 PMCID: PMC7189572 DOI: 10.1186/s40748-020-00116-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Health Neonatol Perinatol ISSN: 2054-958X
Demographics of respondents to survey n = number of respondents
Location – respondents at each site/number invited to participate | Tertiary centre | 74/116 (64%) |
| Regional centre | 17/30 (57%) | |
| Remote centre | 22/28 (79%) | |
Work stream | Midwifery | 41 (36.3%) |
| Obstetrics | 17 (15.0%) | |
| Neonatal nurse | 28 (24.8%) | |
| Neonatologist | 5 (4.4%) | |
| Paediatrician | 21 (28.6%) | |
Contact with women at risk of extreme prematurity n = 113 | Yes | 104 (92.0%) |
Duration of work experience in years n = 112 | < 1 | 11 (9.7%) |
| 1–5 | 27 (23.9%) | |
| > 5–9 | 24 (21.2%) | |
| 10+ | 50 (44.2%) | |
Confidence in knowledge of implications of extreme prematurity | Not Confident | 30 (26.8%) |
| Neutral | 17 (15.0%) | |
| Confident | 65 (58.0%) | |
Ever asked for personal opinion about resuscitation by a woman at risk of extreme prematurity (numbers asked/total respondents) | Midwifery | 17/41 (42%) |
| Obstetrics | 13/17 (77%) | |
| Neonatologist | 4/5 (80%) | |
| Neonatal nurse | 13/28 (46%) | |
| Paediatrician | 11/21 (52%) |
Fig. 1Estimates of survival at different completed weeks gestation, with responses given in quintiles. Accurate survival figures represented by the solid arrow indicating actual survival quintile based on data for the tertiary unit for the years 2013 to 2017 inclusive. Responses to the left of the arrow indicate a negative understanding of the survival rates for each gestation. Data not given for 22 week gestation babies as the numbers treated were small
Fig. 2Estimates of severe disability in quintiles given by participants. The quintile based on ANZNN data for babies born from 2011 to 2014 inclusive is represented by the solid arrow. All responses to the right of the arrow represent negative estimates of severe disability. Data for 22 week gestation babies is not given in the ANZNN database
Fig. 3Estimates of rates of intact survival in quintiles. Actual rates of typical development as given by the ANZNN database for 2011 to 2014 inclusive are indicated by the solid arrow. Responses to the left of the arrow for each gestation indicate a negative response. Accurate data omitted for 22 completed weeks gestation as data may be inaccurate because of small numbers of survivors within the group and is not given in the ANZNN database
Factors which might influence HCP to be more likely (positive influence) or less likely (negative influence) to consider intensive care to be appropriate
| Negative influence | Neutral | Positive influence | |
|---|---|---|---|
Parents request intensive care, clinician feels it is not in babys best interest | 21 (21.6%) | 9 (9.3%) | 67 (69.1%) |
Clinician promotes intensive care where parent does not wish provision of NICU | 36 (37.5%) | 21 (21.9%) | 39 (40.6%) |
Low socio-economic family | 4 (4.1%) | 87 (89.7%) | 6 (6.2%) |
Mother under 20 years of age | 2 (2.1%) | 89 (91.8%) | 6 (6.2%) |
Mother over 40 years of age | 1 (1.0%) | 85 (87.6%) | 11 (11.3%) |
Children in state care n = 97 | 15 (15.5%) | 76 (78.4%) | 6 (6.2%) |
Known surgical anomaly usually provided care at term | 58 (59.8%) | 30 (30.9%) | 9 (9.3%) |
Known trisomy 21 | 54 (55.7%) | 35 (36.1%) | 7 (7.2%) |
Previous pregnancy loss n = 97 | 1 (1.0%) | 63 (64.9%) | 33 (34.0%) |
No live children n = 97 | 2 (2.1%) | 61 (62.9%) | 34 (35.1%) |
HCP opinion about the gestation at which they considered that parents could be the final decision makers for decisions about care. Data expressed in numbers (percent) (* signifies significant p=<0.05)
| Informed parent can make final decision | Clinician can make a final decision regardless of parental preference | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Never | 32 (38.6%) | 13 (15.9%) | 0.01* |
| < 25 weeks | 45 (54.2%) | 53 (64.6%) | 0.47 |
| 25–28 weeks | 6 (7.2%) | 16 (19.5%) | 0.04* |
* denotes significant finding p=<0.05
Themes and representative quotes for content analysis of the free text
| Theme | Representative quotation |
|---|---|
| Every situation is different | The decision should be individualised for every family (Paediatrician) |
| The burden of guilt is too much for parents | No parent wants to live with the ‘did I kill my baby’ dilemma (Neonatal nurse) |
| Parental choice is paramount | Will the parents be willing to look after a disabled child they didn’t want resuscitated? (Midwife) Parents are influenced by lesser degrees of disability and not only severe disability (Obstetrician) |
| Advocating for the baby | At 24 weeks approximately half the survivors will have only mild or no disability. The uncertainty of outcome combined with uncertainty around exact gestation make any definitive advice around outcome imprecise. Resuscitation is not the last opportunity to withhold treatment from a baby … Choosing death is not necessarily a decision to be rushed. The disabled have rights. (Neonatologist) If a healthcare professional believes the chance of survival for an infant is good, full active management should happen regardless of the parental opinion. I believe we have to advocate for the baby when the parents do not have its best interests in mind. (Midwife) |
| Following the law | When it comes to the wellbeing of a premature infant, there are legal guidelines regarding viability to protect the unborn child (Nurse) |
| Ways to educate pregnant women about prematurity | Perhaps a basic handout of survival and disability statistics of babies born less than 30 weeks gestation should be given to parents at their first booking-in clinic. If the parents have a basic awareness, they may already have made a decision should they be unlucky enough to have an extremely preterm baby … most parents choose trying to save the baby because they have not had time to think what life would be like caring for a moderately or severely disabled child. (Neonatal nurse) If they are healthy this wont be needed. Why upset the mum as she will think something is wrong … the woman at risk could be identified … and then educated (Midwife) |