Literature DB >> 7664560

Withholding and withdrawing of life support from patients with severe head injury.

J G O'Callahan1, C Fink, L H Pitts, J M Luce.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To characterize the withholding or withdrawing of life support from patients with severe head injury.
SETTING: San Francisco General Hospital, a city and county hospital with a Level I trauma center.
DESIGN: A standardized questionnaire was used to collect data on demographics and functional outcome of severely head-injured (Glasgow Coma Score of < or = 7) patients admitted to the medical-surgical intensive care unit, and to interview the patients' physician and family members. PATIENTS: Forty-seven patients who were admitted to a medical-surgical intensive care unit over a 1-yr period.
INTERVENTIONS: Twenty-four patients had life support withheld or withdrawn, and 23 patients did not.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Physician and family separately assessed patient's probable functional outcome, degree of communication between them, reasons important in recommending or deciding on discontinuation of life support, and the result of action taken. Six months later, the families reviewed the process of their decision, how well physician(s) had communicated, and what might have improved communication. Of 24 patients with life support discontinued, 22 died; two were discharged from the hospital. Twenty-three of the 24 patients had a poor prognosis on admission. Of the 23 patients who were continued on life support for the duration of their hospitalization, ten had a poor (p < .001) prognosis on admission. Prognosis improved for two patients from the first group and five from the latter. Family's assessment of prognosis agreed with physician's assessment in 22 of the 24 patients from whom life support was discontinued (p < .001). Physicians' ability to convey the prognosis appeared to influence families' assessments. Physicians' considerations in recommending limitation of care and families' considerations in making decisions were the same, primarily an inevitably poor prognosis. Neither physician nor families cited cost or availability of care as a deciding factor. Two families disagreed with the recommendation to limit care after initial agreement because the patients' prognosis improved from "likely death" to "vegetative." Care was therefore continued, and both patients remained vegetative 6 months after admission to the hospital and discharge to chronic care facilities.
CONCLUSIONS: Life support is commonly withheld or withdrawn from patients with severe head injury at San Francisco General Hospital, and usually it is accompanied by death. A reciprocal consideration exists in most cases between the physician and family making the difficult decision to limit care. Care is provided for patients whose families request it despite physician recommendations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Death and Euthanasia; Empirical Approach; San Francisco General Hospital

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7664560     DOI: 10.1097/00003246-199509000-00018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  7 in total

1.  In their own time: the family experience during the process of withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy.

Authors:  Debra Wiegand
Journal:  J Palliat Med       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 2.947

2.  Factors influencing decisions by critical care physicians to withdraw life-sustaining treatments in critically ill adult patients with severe traumatic brain injury.

Authors:  Alexis F Turgeon; Kristin Dorrance; Patrick Archambault; François Lauzier; François Lamontagne; Ryan Zarychanski; Robert Fowler; Lynne Moore; Jacques Lacroix; Shane English; Amélie Boutin; John Muscedere; Karen E A Burns; Donald Griesdale; Lauralyn A McIntyre; Damon Scales; Francis Bernard; Janet Yamada; Janet E Squires
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2019-06-17       Impact factor: 8.262

Review 3.  Recommendations for the Critical Care Management of Devastating Brain Injury: Prognostication, Psychosocial, and Ethical Management : A Position Statement for Healthcare Professionals from the Neurocritical Care Society.

Authors:  Michael J Souter; Patricia A Blissitt; Sandralee Blosser; Jordan Bonomo; David Greer; Draga Jichici; Dea Mahanes; Evie G Marcolini; Charles Miller; Kiranpal Sangha; Susan Yeager
Journal:  Neurocrit Care       Date:  2015-08       Impact factor: 3.210

4.  Factors associated with the withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies in patients with severe traumatic brain injury: a multicenter cohort study.

Authors:  Nicolas Côte; Alexis F Turgeon; François Lauzier; Lynne Moore; Damon C Scales; Francis Bernard; Ryan Zarychanski; Karen E A Burns; Maureen O Meade; David Zygun; Jean-François Simard; Amélie Boutin; Jacques G Brochu; Dean A Fergusson
Journal:  Neurocrit Care       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 3.210

5.  Withdrawal of technological life support following subarachnoid hemorrhage.

Authors:  Robert G Kowalski; Tiffany R Chang; J Ricardo Carhuapoma; Rafael J Tamargo; Neeraj S Naval
Journal:  Neurocrit Care       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 3.210

6.  Should we allow organ donation euthanasia? Alternatives for maximizing the number and quality of organs for transplantation.

Authors:  Dominic Wilkinson; Julian Savulescu
Journal:  Bioethics       Date:  2010-05-03       Impact factor: 1.898

7.  Prognostication in critically ill patients with severe traumatic brain injury: the TBI-Prognosis multicentre feasibility study.

Authors:  Alexis F Turgeon; François Lauzier; Ryan Zarychanski; Dean A Fergusson; Caroline Léger; Lauralyn A McIntyre; Francis Bernard; Andrea Rigamonti; Karen Burns; Donald E Griesdale; Robert Green; Damon C Scales; Maureen O Meade; Martin Savard; Michèle Shemilt; Jérôme Paquet; Jean-Luc Gariépy; André Lavoie; Kesh Reddy; Draga Jichici; Giuseppe Pagliarello; David Zygun; Lynne Moore
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-04-17       Impact factor: 2.692

  7 in total

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