DNAR order status changes during surgical procedures : intent versus practice

Article indépendant

JOHNSON, Lily | MANAGO, Neil | CANTILLO, Michelle | JOHNSON, Sidney

AbstractIntroduction: The practice of automatic suspension of "do not attempt resuscitation" (DNAR) orders has been abandoned in favor of more nuanced discussions. We sought to assess the practical implementation of DNAR orders at our institution during surgery. METHODS: This study conducted a retrospective review of DNAR practices, examining the records of 100 random patients with preexisting DNAR orders prior to surgery. The review documented any changes in DNAR status relative to surgery and then assessed whether the changes in DNAR status were carried forward into the electronic health record (EHR) as updated orders. RESULTS: The DNAR status of patients with an existing DNAR order was documented as having been rediscussed in 85 percent of cases prior to surgical procedures or interventions requiring general anesthesia. That noted, there was no update in the EHR to the DNAR orders in 88 percent of these cases, suggesting a potential gap in desired care were an event requiring resuscitation to happen while under anesthesia. CONCLUSION: Our review indicates that while alterations in the DNAR wishes were often documented relative to anesthesia and surgery, the code status order was not consistently updated, leading to potential gaps in care. The findings underscore the need to standardize processes for updating DNAR status with order sets to ensure that the patient's wishes are accurately reflected during and after anesthesia or surgery.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/734768

Voir la revue «The journal of clinical ethics, 36»

Autres numéros de la revue «The journal of clinical ethics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Honoring patient choices with advance care pl...

Article | CANTILLO, Michelle | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°4 | vol.19

Patients in Hawai’i are spending their dying days in the hospital and the intensive care unit. In Hawai’i, as of 2014, inpatient spending during the hospitalization in which death occurred was $5518, and US national av...

Honoring patient choices with advance care pl...

Article indépendant | CANTILLO, Michelle | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°4 | vol.19

Patients in Hawai’i are spending their dying days in the hospital and the intensive care unit. In Hawai’i, as of 2014, inpatient spending during the hospitalization in which death occurred was $5518, and US national av...

Honoring patient choices with advance care pl...

Article indépendant | CANTILLO, Michelle | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°4 | vol.19

Patients in Hawai’i are spending their dying days in the hospital and the intensive care unit. In Hawai’i, as of 2014, inpatient spending during the hospitalization in which death occurred was $5518, and US national average was $3...

De la même série

TIEC, trauma capacity, and the moral priority...

Article indépendant | FIESTER, Autumn | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

In the past 15 years, trauma-informed care (TIC) has evolved as a new paradigm in healthcare that recognizes the impact of past traumas on patients' and families' healthcare experience while seeking to avoid inducing new trauma du...

Defining and refining trauma-informed ethics ...

Article indépendant | LANPHIER, Elizabeth | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

This article responds to Autumn Fiester's "TIEC, Trauma Capacity, and the Moral Priority of Surrogate Decision Makers in Futility Disputes," in which Fiester argues for a vision of trauma-informed ethics consultation that systemat...

A deeper look at ethics consultation

Article indépendant | MORREIM, Haavi | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

Autumn Fiester suggests that trauma-informed ethics consultation (TIEC) should focus on surrogate decision makers (SDMs) in preference over patients when (a) the patient is comatose or neurologically devastated, and hence beyond t...

DNAR order status changes during surgical pro...

Article indépendant | JOHNSON, Lily | The journal of clinical ethics | n°2 | vol.36

AbstractIntroduction: The practice of automatic suspension of "do not attempt resuscitation" (DNAR) orders has been abandoned in favor of more nuanced discussions. We sought to assess the practical implementation of DNAR orders at...

Patient perspectives on the authority of adva...

Article indépendant | POTTER, Jordan | The journal of clinical ethics | n°2 | vol.36

AbstractContext: As advance directives (ADs) become more frequently utilized, opportunities increase for conflict between a patient's designated healthcare power of attorney (POA) and the treatment preferences outlined in their li...

Chargement des enrichissements...