Literature DB >> 33301646

TRIAD XI: Utilizing simulation to evaluate the living will and POLST ability to achieve goal concordant care when critically ill or at end-of-life-The Realistic Interpretation of Advance Directives.

Ferdinando Mirarchi1, Kristin Juhasz1, Timothy Cooney1, Daniel Desiderio1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Utilize simulation to evaluate if living wills (LW) or POLST achieves goal concordant Care (GCC) in a medical crisis.
METHODS: Nurses and resident-physicians from a single center were randomized to a clinical scenario with a living will (LW), physician orders for life sustaining treatment (POLST) or no document. Primary outcomes were resuscitation decision and time to decision. Secondary outcome was the effect of education.
RESULTS: Total enrollment was 57 and less than 30% received prior training. Types of directives were linked to resuscitation decisions (P = .019). Participants randomized to "No Document" or POLST specifying "CPR" performed resuscitation. If a terminal condition presented with a POLST/ do not resuscitate-comfort measures only (DNR-CMO), 73% resuscitated. The LW or POLST specifying DNR combined with medical support resulted in resuscitations in 29% or more of the scenarios. Documents did not significantly affect median time-to-decision (P = .402) but decisions for "No Document" and POLST/CPR were at least 10 s less than other scenarios. Scenarios involving POLST DNR/Limited Treatment had the highest median time of 43 s. Prior training in LWs and POLST exerted a 10% improvement in decision making (P = .537).
CONCLUSION: GCC was not always achieved with a LW or POLST. This conclusion supports prior research identifying problems with the interpretation and discordance with LW's and POLST.
© 2020 American Society for Healthcare Risk Management of the American Hospital Association.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 33301646     DOI: 10.1002/jhrm.21453

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Healthc Risk Manag        ISSN: 1074-4797


  1 in total

1.  "SpezPat"- common advance directives versus disease-centred advance directives: a randomised controlled pilot study on the impact on physicians' understanding of non-small cell lung cancer patients' end-of-life decisions.

Authors:  Julia Felicitas Leni Koenig; Thomas Asendorf; Alfred Simon; Annalen Bleckmann; Lorenz Truemper; Gerald Wulf; Tobias R Overbeck
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2022-09-28       Impact factor: 3.113

  1 in total

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