| Literature DB >> 35854318 |
Tereza Prokopová1,2, Jan Hudec1,2, Kamil Vrbica1, Jan Stašek1, Andrea Pokorná3,4,5, Petr Štourač2,6, Kateřina Rusinová7, Paulína Kerpnerová8, Radka Štěpánová9, Adam Svobodník9, Jan Maláska10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Providing palliative care at the end of life (EOL) in intensive care units (ICUs) seems to be modified during the COVID-19 pandemic with potential burden of moral distress to health care providers (HCPs). We seek to assess the practice of EOL care during the COVID-19 pandemic in ICUs in the Czech Republic focusing on the level of moral distress and its possible modifiable factors.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Ethical climate; Inappropriate care; Moral distress; Palliative care; Pandemic; Survey
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35854318 PMCID: PMC9294824 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-022-04066-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 19.334
Respondent’s characteristics and COVID-19 experience
| Results | |
|---|---|
| Age, yr, median (IQR) | 42 (33–48) |
| Sex, F, | 207 (66.1) |
| Nurse | 179 (57.2) |
| General nurse | 143 (79.9) |
| Paramedic | 11 (6.1) |
| Children’s nurse | 6 (3.4) |
| Practical nurse | 5 (2.8) |
| Student | 3 (1.7) |
| Midwife | 3 (1.7) |
| Physician | 134 (42.8) |
| | |
| Consultant | 52 (38.8) |
| Senior Consultant | 32 (23.9) |
| Head of the ICU | 28 (20.9) |
| Resident | 14 (10.4) |
| Head of the clinic | 3 (2.2) |
| Anaesthesia and intensive care medicine | 92 (68.7) |
| Intensive care medicine | 27 (20.1) |
| Internal medicine | 18 (13.4) |
| Palliative care | 14 (10.4) |
| Surgery | 12 (9.0) |
| Infectious disease | 8 (6.0) |
| Other | 7 (5.2) |
| ICU experience, yr, median (IQR) | 12 (3–20) |
| Established ICU | 191 (61.0) |
| New COVID-19 ICU | 100 (31.9) |
| ICU in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine dpt | 180 (57.5) |
| Patients/HCPs, | 3.15 |
| Patients/Nurses, | 2.46 |
| Patients/Physicians, | 4.08 |
| University (tertiary) hospital | 145 (46.3) |
| Secondary hospital | 104 (33.2) |
| Primary hospital | 48 (15.3) |
| Comfort care experience before COVID-19, Yes, | 264 (84.3) |
| Local protocol available, Yes, | 97 (31.0) |
| Palliative consult available, Yes, | 128 (40.9) |
| Advanced directives experience, Yes, | 123 (39.3) |
| Advanced directives respected, Yes | 97 (78.9) |
COVID-19 Coronavirus disease, IQR interquartile range, ICU intensive care unit, HCPs health care providers
*More than one answer possible
Fig. 1Expression and respect of HCPs opinion regarding perceiving disproportionate organ support
Description of palliative care and EOLD during COVID-19 pandemic
| Results ( | |
|---|---|
| Personnel involved in EOLD process*, | |
| Attending physician | 293 (93.6) |
| Head of the ICU | 253 (80.8) |
| Patient’s relatives | 170 (54.3) |
| Attending nurse | 157 (50.2) |
| Consultant physician | 90 (28.8) |
| Matron/Head nurse | 77 (24.6) |
| Palliative care physician | 22 (7.0) |
| Form of EOLD communication with patient’s family*, | |
| Family meeting | 269 (85.9) |
| Telephone call | 203 (64.9) |
| Meeting with patient’s family was not performed | 12 (3.8) |
| Videocall | 9 (2.9) |
| Involvement of the patient's family regarding EOLD, | |
Family/relatives were just informed about the decision; Patient was in comfort care if family/relatives did not disagree with the decision | 141 (45.0) |
| Family/relatives were included in the process, i.e. shared decisions | 81 (25.9) |
| Cannot answer as I was not involved in the decision process | 39 (12.5) |
Family/relatives were just informed about the decision; Patient was in comfort care despite family’s disagreement | 33 (10.5) |
| Family/relatives were not informed about the decision | 10 (3.2) |
| Family/relatives were fully responsible for the decision | 7 (2.2) |
| Inappropriate care of patient*, | |
| Yes, organ support was too long | 151 (48.2) |
| Yes, organ support was too extensive | 114 (36.4) |
| No | 100 (31.9) |
| Yes, organ support was not extensive enough | 40 (12.8) |
| Yes, organ support was too short | 36 (11.5) |
| Physician | |
| Express opinion about inappropriate care, Yes, | 89 (92.7) |
| Opinion respected, Yesb | 71 (79.8) |
| Nurse | |
| Express opinion about inappropriate care, Yes, | 87 (77.0) |
| Opinion respected, Yesb | 37 (42.5) |
| Resource scarcity situation experience, | |
| No | 86 (27.5) |
| Yes, occasionally | 36 (11.5) |
| Yes, repeatedly | 10 (3.2) |
| 181 (57.8) | |
| Practice of comfort care was different during/before COVID-19 pandemic | |
| Strongly agree | 49 (15.7) |
| Somewhat agree | 104 (33.2) |
| Do not know | 34 (10.9) |
| Somewhat disagree | 90 (28.8) |
| Strongly disagree | 32 (10.2) |
COVID-19 Coronavirus disease, IQR interquartile range, EOLD end-of-life decision
aPercentage based on number of physicians/nurses who considered care of patient as inappropriate
bP < 0.001 between nurses and physicians regarding expressing their opinion regarding inappropriate care and respecting opinion
*More than one answer possible
Possible factors of different practices of palliative care during COVID-19 pandemic
| Results | |
|---|---|
| Health system congestion | 107 (69.9) |
| Personal factors | 101 (66.0) |
| Primary nature of COVID-19 disease | 90 (58.8) |
| Organisational and process factors | 75 (49.0) |
| Technical equipment | 69 (45.1) |
| Different ethical principles | 44 (28.8) |
| Communication within the team | 27 (17.6) |
| Process of EOLD discussions | 22 (14.4) |
| Emotions | 19 (12.4) |
| Communication with the management | 18 (11.8) |
| Strongly agree | 60 (19.2) |
| Somewhat agree | 168 (53.7) |
| Do not know | 35 (11.2) |
| Somewhat disagree | 35 (11.2) |
| Strongly disagree | 7 (2.2) |
| Strongly agree | 69 (22.0) |
| Somewhat agree | 124 (39.6) |
| Do not know | 35 (11.2) |
| Somewhat disagree | 61 (19.5) |
| Strongly disagree | 14 (4.5) |
| System problems | 52 (22.2) |
| Inconsistent opinions of physicians on comfort care | 40 (17.1) |
| Principles of comfort care were not fully understood | 29 (12.4) |
| Insufficient control of patient’s symptoms | 21 (9.0) |
| Insufficient communication within the team | 18 (7.7) |
| Inconsistent opinions of nurses on comfort care | 18 (7.7) |
| Resource scarcity situation | 7 (3.0) |
| No, process was respecting medical and ethical principles | 214 (68.4) |
| Yes, I did not consider process adequate | 52 (16.6) |
| Yes, professional medical reasons | 25 (8.0) |
| Yes, moral reasons | 5 (1.6) |
| No | 154 (49.2) |
| Yes, but I understood importance of the argument | 108 (34.5) |
| Yes, but I was not comfortable with the argument | 36 (11.5) |
COVID-19 Coronavirus disease, EOLD end-of-life decision
aPercentage based on number of HCPs who answered ‘Strongly agree’ or ‘Somewhat agree’ on the question ‘Principles and practice of comfort care differ during/before Covid-19 pandemic’
bPercentage based on number of HCPs who answered any option except for ‘Strongly agree’ on the question ‘Most COVID-19 patients were dying with dignity’
*More than one answer possible
Distress and moral distress during COVID-19 pandemic
| Results | |
|---|---|
| Major sources of distress*, | |
| Spending less time with patients | 168 (53.7) |
| Inconsistent opinions of physicians regarding comfort care | 133 (42.5) |
| Insufficient communication with patient’s family | 74 (23.6) |
| Inconsistent opinions of nurses on comfort care | 72 (23.0) |
| Insufficient communication about goals of treatment within the team | 69 (22.0) |
| I was exposed to moral distress during the COVID-19 pandemic, | |
| Strongly agree | 75 (24.0) |
| Somewhat agree | 87 (27.8) |
| Do not know | 23 (7.3) |
| Somewhat disagree | 92 (29.4) |
| Strongly disagree | 28 (8.9) |
| | 2 (2–4) |
| Level of moral distress was comparable to situation before COVID-19 pandemic, | |
| Strongly agree | 5 (3.1) |
| Somewhat agree | 24 (14.8) |
| Do not know | 11 (6.8) |
| Somewhat disagree | 82 (50.6) |
| Strongly disagree | 39 (24.1) |
| Major sources of moral distress*, | |
| Work intensity—psychological exhaustion | 27 (16.7) |
| Work intensity—physical exhaustion | 23 (14.2) |
| Cooperation with not qualified colleagues | 20 (12.3) |
| Changes in the standards of care | 19 (11.7) |
| Severity of condition/prognosis of admitted patients | 16 (9.9) |
| Personal interactions at the ICU | 16 (9.9) |
| Prioritisation of care due to resource scarcity situation | 16 (9.9) |
| Responsibility for insufficiently qualified colleagues | 14 (8.6) |
| Work intensity—risk of infection | 10 (6.2) |
| Organisational/institutional problems | 6 (3.7) |
| Administration of experimental treatments | 5 (3.1) |
COVID-19 Coronavirus disease, IQR interquartile range, ICU intensive care unit
aPercentage based on number of HCPs who answered ‘Strongly agree’ or ‘Somewhat agree’ on the question ‘I was exposed to moral distress during the Covid-19 pandemic’
*More than one answer possible
Univariate analysis—potential predictors for moral distress
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | 282 | 1.0000 | |
| Female versus Male | 1.000 (0.606–1.650) | ||
| Profession of HCPs | 282 | 0.9835 | |
| Nurse versus Physician | 1.005 (0.624–1.618) | ||
| Age | 282 | 0.998 (0.975–1.021) | 0.8340 |
| ICU experience | 274 | 0.989 (0.965–1.014) | 0.3863 |
| Number of patients per HCP | 270 | 1.072 (0.971–1.184) | 0.1680 |
| Type of hospital | 268 | 0.2219 | |
| Secondary hospital | Ref | ||
| Primary hospital | 1.789 (0.848–3.773) | ||
| University (tertiary) hospital | 1.456 (0.853–2.485) | ||
| Form of EOLD communication with patient’s family | 280 | 0.3728 | |
| Family meeting | Ref | ||
| Telephone call | 1.377 (0.817–2.323) | ||
| Videocall | 0.953 (0.224–4.067) | ||
| Meeting with patient’s family was not performed | 2.860 (0.723–11.312) | ||
| Involvement of the patient's family regarding EOLD | 281 | 0.3810 | |
| Family/relatives were included in process, i.e. shared decisions | Ref | ||
| Family/relatives were fully responsible for the decision | 2.308 (0.421–12.648) | ||
Family/relatives were just informed about the decision; Patient was in comfort care despite family's disagreement | 1.762 (0.747–4.159) | ||
Family/relatives were just informed about the decision; Patient was in comfort care if family/relatives did not disagree with the decision | 1.175 (0.661–2.087) | ||
| Family/relatives were not informed about decision | 7.385 (0.880–61.994) | ||
| Cannot answer as I was not involved in the decision process | 1.108 (0.487–2.519) | ||
| Inappropriate care of patient, Yes versus No | 280 | 1.804 (1.082–3.008) | 0.0237 |
| Opinion about inappropriate care of patient respected, Yes versus No | 165 | 0.511 (0.261–1.001) | 0.0504 |
| Therapy goals were always clearly explained and defined, Yes versus No | 281 | 0.297 (0.160–0.551) | 0.0001 |
| Agreement with statement that the deaths of COVID-19 patients were dignified, Yes versus No | 277 | 0.203 (0.114–0.359) | < .0001 |
| Resource scarcity situation experience, Yes versus No | 115 | 1.735 (0.807–3.732) | 0.1585 |
CI confidence interval, HCPs health care providers, ICU intensive care unit, COVID-19 coronavirus disease, EOLD end-of-life decision
Multivariate analysis—predictors for moral distress
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 276 | |||
| Inappropriate care of patient, Yes versus No | 1.854 (1.057–3.252) | 0.0312 | |
| Therapy goals were always clearly explained and defined, Yes versus No | 0.515 (0.261–1.013) | 0.0546 | |
| Agreement with statement that the deaths of COVID-19 patients were dignified, Yes versus No | 0.235 (0.128–0.430) | < .0001 |
CI confidence interval; COVID-19 coronavirus disease
Fig. 2Factors associated with moral distress – multivariate analysis
Fig. 3Bar charts depicting proportion of reported moral distress related to the predictors for moral distress