| Literature DB >> 32734185 |
Vanessa Grubbs1,2, Delphine S Tuot1,2, Neil R Powe1,2, Donal O'Donoghue3,4, Catherine A Chesla5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Shared decision making may be particularly complex for the older patient with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), in part because of family involvement. Nephrologists' perspectives on the family's role in ESRD decision making have not been explored. STUDYEntities:
Keywords: ESRD decision-making; Family; conservation management; dialysis withdrawal; foregoing dialysis; qualitative methodology
Year: 2019 PMID: 32734185 PMCID: PMC7380365 DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2019.02.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Med ISSN: 2590-0595
Participant Characteristics, Overall and by Country
| Characteristic | Overall (N = 59) | US (n = 41) | England (n = 18) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age group | |||
| ≤45 y | 34 (57.6%) | 26 (63.4%) | 8 (44.4%) |
| 46-65 y | 20 (33.9%) | 10 (24.4%) | 10 (55.6%) |
| ≥66 y | 5 (8.5%) | 5 (12.2%) | 0 (0%) |
| Male sex | 45 (76.3%) | 31 (75.6%) | 14 (77.8%) |
| Race/ethnicity | |||
| White | 35 (59.3%) | 20 (48.8%) | 15 (83.3%) |
| Black | 4 (6.8%) | 4 (9.8%) | 0 (0%) |
| Latino | 3 (5.1%) | 3 (7.3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Asian | 17 (28.8%) | 14 (34.1%) | 3 (16.7%) |
| Years since completed nephrology training | |||
| <5 | 10 (16.9%) | 8 (19.5%) | 2 (11.1%) |
| 5-10 | 16 (27.1%) | 11 (26.8%) | 5 (27.8%) |
| 10-20 | 16 (27.1%) | 11 (26.8%) | 5 (27.8%) |
| ≥20 | 17 (28.8%) | 11 (26.8%) | 6 (33.3%) |
| US region | n/a | ||
| Midwest | 11 (26.8%) | 11 (26.8%) | |
| Northeast | 10 (24.4%) | 10 (24.4%) | |
| South | 10 (24.4%) | 10 (24.4%) | |
| West | 10 (24.4%) | 10 (24.4%) | |
| England region | n/a | ||
| Metropolitan | 10 (55.6%) | 10 (55.6%) | |
| Town and country | 8 (44.4%) | 8 (44.4%) | |
| Practice setting | |||
| Closed | 19 (32.2%) | 3 (7.3%) | 18 (100.0%) |
| Academic | 25 (42.4%) | 25 (61.0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Private | 12 (20.3%) | 12 (29.3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Other | 3 (5.1%) | 1 (2.4%) | 0 (0%) |
| No. of nephrologists in practice setting | |||
| <10 | 23 (39.0%) | 17 (41.5%) | 6 (33.3%) |
| 10-20 | 30 (50.9%) | 20 (48.8%) | 10 (55.6%) |
| >20 | 6 (10.2%) | 4 (9.8%) | 2 (11.1%) |
| Physician payment | |||
| Fee for service only | 7 (11.9%) | 7 (17.1%) | 0 (0%) |
| Salary only | 45 (76.3%) | 27 (65.9%) | 18 (100.0%) |
| Salary + fee for service | 7 (11.9%) | 7 (17.1%) | 0 (0%) |
| No. of maintenance dialysis patients in care | |||
| 0 | 6 (10.2%) | 4 (9.8%) | 2 (11.1%) |
| <20 | 6 (10.2%) | 6 (14.6%) | 0 (0%) |
| 20-50 | 19 (32.2%) | 16 (39.0%) | 3 (16.7%) |
| 50-80 | 14 (23.7%) | 10 (24.4%) | 4 (22.2%) |
| >80 | 14 (23.7%) | 5 (12.2%) | 9 (50.0%) |
| No. of wks of inpatient consult service | |||
| <12 | 26 (44.1%) | 16 (39.0%) | 10 (55.6%) |
| 12-24 | 20 (33.9%) | 14 (34.1%) | 6 (33.3%) |
| ≥24 | 13 (22.0%) | 11 (26.8%) | 2 (11.1%) |
| No. of inpatient consults per wk on average, mean (SD) | 25.8 (14.0) | 27.4 (14.5) | 22.1 (12.4) |
Abbreviation. SD, standard deviation.
National Health Service (England) or Veterans Administration (United States).
Emerging Themes With Representative Quotes for Family Involvement in Decisions to Forego or Withdraw Dialysis
| Factors Impeding Decisions | Factors Facilitating Decisions | |
|---|---|---|
| Emotional responses in decision making | In one situation, I had a lady who had a malignant metastatic breast carcinoma with lymphangitic carcinomatosa. She had pulmonary edema because I couldn’t take any fluid off. She was weeping when she was being transferred to the trolley to the bed in order to have dialysis, from the ward to the bed. They wanted [her] to continue dialysis. Their main fear was she would die quickly and she would die from the thing that they’ve been trying, to stop her dying [from] for the last decade. —English nephrologist | So I think it’s always a brave decision to say that you’re not going to do something. It’s easy to say, ‘Oh, let’s do something,’ but I think as long as everybody is involved and often it’s the relatives at the end of the day if the patient hasn’t got the capacity, and they’re on board and everything, then I think it was the kindest thing to do for her. —English nephrologist |
| Involvement in patient health care/awareness of illness | It’s often the distant relative, the one who hasn’t been around for many years who comes down and says, ‘What’s wrong with Dad?’ or ‘What’s wrong with Mum? They never used to be like this.’ [Laughter] ‘That’s because you only see them once a year and you give them a ring and they’re probably well for a few days and you don’t appreciate how well they actually are.’ —English nephrologist | There was one loving family where the daughter was there every time for her mother who was 86 and was deaf. She just said, ‘Look, I don’t think that my mom would understand. Frankly I think she’ll pull the catheter, she’ll pull the needles if there’s access.’ She had a very, very valid argument. –US nephrologist |
| Trust in physician | It was really challenging because I could tell that this family member was distrustful. I could tell that he felt like everyone was ‘trying to pull the plug on his mother.’ I really didn’t think it was good to dialyze her. I felt like it was really hard to get around that or to avoid doing it. —US nephrologist | |
| Acceptance of patient wishes | [There was] an older gentleman who—all he did was cry, and whine and shout and with agony all the time. His wife would force him to get into an ambulance, then send him over to the clinic. He would cry and groan and moan the whole time and it was awful and horrible. We tried to convince her that what she was doing was morally unacceptable. This was really very difficult to do and we had—we, the patient and the clinic staff, had to suffer with that for several months before we finally got her to withdraw care. So it’s my feeling what we were doing was immoral but it is very difficult sometimes when you understand that the consequence of stopping therapy is death, to simply override the family’s wishes. —US nephrologist | He decided he just did not want treatment and he was getting weaker and weaker and we dialyzed him a few times. He said to me, ‘I just want to go home and die now. I’ve had enough. I’m just getting worse and worse.’ So we stopped [dialysis]. His wife was there. She fully understood. We took his line out and he went home and he died a couple of days later. —English nephrologist |
| Financial considerations | I had a patient whose son was getting a check every month from his mom’s Social Security. She was in her 90’s and bed-bound. She came into the hospital with sepsis, and she was already on dialysis. He insisted that everything be done for this lady. She ended up in a long-term acute care facility with a tracheostomy and is still there now. —US nephrologist |
Described only by US nephrologists.