| Literature DB >> 34476722 |
William Lou1, Justin H Granstein1, Rafael Wabl1, Amita Singh1, Sarah Wahlster1, Claire J Creutzfeldt2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tracheostomy represents one important and value-laden treatment decision after severe acute brain injury (SABI). Whether to pursue this life-sustaining treatment typically hinges on intense conversations between family and clinicians. The aim of this study was, among a cohort of patient who had undergone tracheostomy after SABI, to explore the long-term reflections of patients and their families as they look back on this decision.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Family; Intensive care units; Prognosis; Stroke; Tracheostomy; Traumatic brain injuries; Uncertainty
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34476722 PMCID: PMC8412876 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-021-01335-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.532
Patient characteristics
| Interviewed ( | All ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) (years) | 50.3 (19.7) | 49.2 (20.1) |
| Female sex, | 4 (22) | 11 (29) |
| Race/ethnicity, | ||
| Asian American and Pacific Islander | 4 (22) | 9 (18) |
| Black | 2 (11) | 6 (16) |
| Hispanic | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| American Indian and Alaskan native | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
| White | 12 (67) | 24 (63) |
| Other | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Advance directives present on admission, | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Diagnosis, | ||
| Ischemic stroke | 4(22) | 6 (16) |
| Intraparenchymal hemorrhage | 3(17) | 8 (21) |
| Subarachnoid hemorrhage | 3 (17) | 5 (13) |
| Traumatic brain Injury | 8 (44) | 19 (50) |
| Number of failed extubation trials prior to tracheotomy, | ||
| None | 7 (39) | 20 (53) |
| One | 2(11) | 4 (11) |
| Two | 9 (50) | 14 (37) |
| Three or more | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Palliative care consultation prior to tracheotomy, | 2 (11) | 7 (18) |
| Ethics consultation prior to tracheotomy, | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| PEG tube during hospitalization, | 18 (100) | 38 (100) |
| Days ventilated before tracheotomy, mean (SD) | 13 (6.1) | 15 (6.5) |
| Months between interview and hospital discharge, mean (SD) | 16 (9) | – |
| Length of initial ICU stay, days, mean (SD) | 27 (9) | 33 (15.1) |
| Length of hospital stay, mean (SD) (days) | 55 (30) | 62 (38.8) |
| Alive at time of interview, | 12 (67) | – |
| Disposition at time of hospital discharge, | ||
| Home | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Inpatient rehabilitation facility | 7 (39) | 8 (21) |
| Skilled nursing or long-term acute care facility | 8 (44) | 23 (61) |
| Death | 3 (17) | 6 (16) |
| Other | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
| Residence at time of interview, | ||
| Home | 10 (56) | – |
| Inpatient rehabilitation facility | 0 (0) | – |
| Skilled nursing or long-term acute care facility | 2 (11) | – |
| Death | 6 (33) | – |
| Other | 0 (0) | – |
| Decision-maker relationship to patient, | ||
| Spouse/partner | 5 (28) | – |
| Parent | 6 (33) | – |
| Adult child | 2 (11) | – |
| Sibling | 4 (22) | – |
| Other | 1 (6) | – |
ICU intensive care unit, PEG xxx
Themes and interview excerpts
| Themes | Interview excerpts |
|---|---|
| Tracheostomy was not a choice | “We felt we had to give her the chance of making a recovery…don’t think we had morally any other choice, OK? It’s a horrible decision to try to make in a short period of time.” No. 15 (husband) |
| “We’ve got to keep her alive because…we were in that window of not knowing. The window of possibly she will come out of the coma, possibly she won’t come out of the coma…we were in a window of she might survive, she might not survive.” No. 14 (sister) | |
| “…we had no idea at that time what [patient]…was going to be. And so we personally thought [patient] would want every chance in the world to recover. And we somehow believed that we had to give him that opportunity.” No. 7 (mother) | |
| “When we were there, we were really conscious of the fact—especially the first two months—that he needed something to prevent him from choking his own saliva. So therefore the question of that tracheostomy was—how to say? [laughter] It was not a matter of question even. We didn’t have to decide. This had to be done!” No. 7 (father) | |
| “If I was in the position where, I mean the brain’s just flat-lining. There’s no brain activity at all, you know? Or there’s nothing, and they’re telling me, ‘He’s brain dead.’ Well, you know, I might not do the tracheostomy. But if they’re telling me, ‘Well, there’s brain activity,’ and it’s a young kid, I don’t know why anybody would give up. The brain’s an amazing thing…I’m probably not doing the tracheotomy if my 90 year old mother has a stroke.” No. 13 (father) | |
| “At the time they were doing the tracheostomy, there was no thought of…life-versus-death decisions. It was ‘This needs to happen. Just do it.’ Because there was no thought of death.” No. 13 (father) | |
| “It’s like if somebody was at the Boston Marathon and his leg was blown off and to ask the family, ‘Can we put a tourniquet on his [leg]…’ It’s kind of a no-brainer.” No. 20 (sister) | |
| Clinician communication requires compassion, hope, and clarity | “We felt so supported and we felt that everybody was trying to explain things as clearly as possible, and compassionately. And to me, those are the two pieces: to clearly give the information, to give it in several ways or to go over it several times, and just the compassion piece.” No. 7 (mother) |
| “I feel like really understanding that this is not just your job, but it’s somebody’s loved one and it needs to be dealt with really gingerly and with a lot of patience and kindness is really important…if I had felt rushed and I did things on a whim, maybe I wouldn’t feel that way, but I feel like that really has helped ease the traumatic memories of Dad, knowing that at the time everything was presented before me, I asked so many questions, I took my time. I never let myself feel rushed into any decision. Even though sometimes we were talking daily about an important decision that we had ahead of us, like the tracheostomy.” No. 6 (daughter) | |
| “One doctor would call me and we would have this great conversation, and he would explain it perfectly to me. And then the next time, it was a different doctor who maybe wasn’t quite as thorough…sometimes there was a little bit of confusion because of the switch.” No. 6 (daughter) | |
| “I can’t stand doctors that talk down to you. They need to come to your level and explain things if you don’t understand them. And not talk over you, not talk around you, like you’re not in the room. They didn’t break it down, and I didn’t realize, ‘OK this is not recoverable, and she’s not going to come back from that.’” No. 14 (sister) | |
| “I think after that conversation I didn’t trust them. As a matter of fact, I wouldn’t even [let the doctor] come in the room. Every time he set foot in the room, I just, ‘Nope. Out. Turn around. I can’t listen to negativity.’” No. 17 (mother) | |
| “It was like all of us sort of felt like we had been kicked in the gut rather than lifted up…most of us felt like the [neuro-ICU] is kind of gloom-and-a-doom. There were a couple of people [who] experienced hope, but we didn’t. And that was sort of the general consensus, is that the whole industry kind of needs to change the way they feel.” No. 17 (mother) |
ICU intensive care unit