| Literature DB >> 34596811 |
Morten Magelssen1, Heidi Karlsen2, Lisbeth Thoresen3.
Abstract
Would primary care services benefit from the aid of a clinical ethics committee (CEC)? The implementation of CECs in primary care in four Norwegian municipalities was supported and their activities followed for 2.5 years. In this study, the CECs' structure and activities are described, with special emphasis on what characterizes the cases they have discussed. In total, the four CECs discussed 54 cases from primary care services, with the four most common topics being patient autonomy, competence and coercion; professionalism; cooperation and disagreement with next of kin; and priority setting, resource use and quality. Nursing homes and home care were the primary care services most often involved. Next of kin were present in 10 case deliberations, whereas patients were never present. The investigation indicates that it might be feasible for new CECs to attain a high level of activity including case deliberations within the time frame. It also confirms that significant, characteristic and complex moral problems arise in primary care services.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical ethics; Clinical ethics committee; Clinical ethics support; Community care; Home care; Municipal care; Nursing home; Primary care
Year: 2021 PMID: 34596811 PMCID: PMC8485308 DOI: 10.1007/s10730-021-09461-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HEC Forum ISSN: 0956-2737
Main ethical issues in 51 CEC case deliberations
| Ethical issue | # of cases | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Patient autonomy, competence and coercion | 20 | Should the patient be admitted to a nursing home against their will? Should the patient with dementia be restricted in taking unsupervised walks, due to safety? (see Magelssen & Karlsen, |
| Professionalism | 10 | Should home care nurses refuse to provide care because the patient’s home provides a poor working environment? How far should the professional "stretch" themselves in providing services? |
| Cooperation and disagreement with next of kin | 9 | Is it acceptable that next of kin forcibly feed the patient who has a short life-expectancy? What should professionals do when the patient’s legal guardian limits the patient’s freedom unreasonably? |
| Priority setting, resource use and quality | 8 | What is the proper level and site of care for a young patient with a history of substance abuse, currently residing in a nursing home? How should the views and needs of the patient’s spouse be weighed in the question of level of care and resource use? |
| Decision-making and care at the end of life | 6 | Should artificial nutrition and hydration be instigated for a patient without competence to consent who has stopped eating and drinking? How should professionals handle disagreement with next of kin about care towards the end of life? |
| Interests of the one vs. interests of the many | 6 | How should the nursing home weigh infection control and the need for patients to receive visits? How should interests be balanced when coercive measures for some patients influence other patients on the ward negatively? |
| Information and confidentiality | 2 | Should a spouse’s wish that the patient not be informed about a progressive, ultimately lethal condition be respected? |
| Encounters between cultures | 1 | Can next of kin demand that the patient not be cared for by a professional of the opposite sex? |
Three of the 54 cases, originating from CEC 4, did not concern the health and care sector; these cases have not been categorized. Several cases have been placed in two categories
Who referred cases to the CEC? 40 of 54 cases accounted for
| Profession/role | # of cases |
|---|---|
| Mid-level managers (wards, units) | 16 |
| Municipal top-level manager | 2 |
| Nurse | 4 |
| Health professional with coordinator role | 4 |
| Physiotherapist | 2 |
| Occupational therapist | 1 |
| Learning disability nurse | 1 |
| CEC members | 7a |
| Municipal office staff | 3 |
aMost common at the start of the study period
Services involved in the cases discussed in the CECs. 50 of 54 cases accounted for
| Service | # of cases |
|---|---|
| Nursing home | 27 |
| Home care | 11 |
| Sheltered housing/services for the disabled | 6 |
| Services outside of health and care | 4 |
| Rehabilitation/lifestyle and coping services | 3 |
| Mental health and substance abuse care | 2 |
| Municipal service allocation office | 2 |
More than one service was involved in five cases
Examples of further activities undertaken by the CECs in the study period
| CEC 1 | CEC 2 | CEC 3 | CEC 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Presentations for municipal managers | Multiple each year | Yearly | Multiple each year | Twice, including municipal council |
| Visits to services | Ethics training for nursing home staff | Ethics training for nurses’ aides in further education | ||
| Seminars for staff | On ethics reflection and priority setting for 330 staff and managers | On autonomy and competence for 70 staff | On ethics reflection for > 100 staff | |
| Contributions to guideline development | On visitation rules during covid pandemic | On visitation rules during covid pandemic | ||
| CEC meetings in total in study period | 26 | 47 | 21 | 7 |