Development and evaluation of an ethical guideline for decisions to limit life-prolonging treatment in advanced cancer : protocol for a monocentric mixed-method interventional study

Article indépendant

LARYIONAVA, Katsiaryna | MEHLIS, Katja | BIERWIRTH, Elena | MUMM, Friederike | HIDDEMANN, Wolfgang | HEUßNER, Pia | WINKLER, Eva C.

BACKGROUND: Many patients with advanced cancer receive chemotherapy close to death and are referred too late to palliative or hospice care, and therefore die under therapy or in intensive care units. Oncologists still have difficulties in involving patients appropriately in decisions about limiting tumor-specific or life-prolonging treatment. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this Ethics Policy for Advanced Care Planning and Limiting Treatment Study is to develop an ethical guideline for end-of-life decisions and to evaluate the impact of this guideline on clinical practice regarding the following target goals: reduction of decisional conflicts, improvement of documentation transparency and traceability, reduction of distress of the caregiver team, and better knowledge and consideration of patients' preferences. METHODS: This is a protocol for a pre-post interventional study that analyzes the clinical practice on treatment limitation before and after the guideline implementation. An embedded researcher design with a mixed-method approach encompassing both qualitative and quantitative methods is used. The study consists of three stages: (1) the preinterventional phase, (2) the intervention (development and implementation of the guideline), and 3) the postinterventional phase (evaluation of the guideline's impact on clinical practice). We evaluate the process of decision-making related to limiting treatment from different perspectives of oncologists, nurses, and patients; comparing them to each other will allow us to develop the guideline based on the interests of all parties. RESULTS: The first preintervention data of the project have already been published, which detailed a qualitative study with oncologists and oncology nurses (n=29), where different approaches to initiation of end-of-life discussions were ethically weighted. A framework for oncologists was elaborated, and the study favored an anticipatory approach of preparing patients for forgoing therapy throughout the course of disease. Another preimplementational study of current decision-making practice (n=567 patients documented) demonstrated that decisions to limit treatment preceded the death of many cancer patients (62/76, 82% of deceased patients). However, such decisions were usually made in the last week of life, which was relatively late. CONCLUSIONS: The intervention will be evaluated with respect to the following endpoints: better knowledge and consideration of patients' treatment wishes; reduction of decisional conflicts; improvement of documentation transparency and traceability; and reduction of the psychological and moral distress of a caregiver team. REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER: RR1-10.2196/9698.

https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/903398c2dafee4576671f3b4150c5e8d.pdf

Voir la revue «JMIR research protocols, 7»

Autres numéros de la revue «JMIR research protocols»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

High prevalence of moral distress reported by...

Article indépendant | MEHLIS, Katja | Psycho-oncology

OBJECTIVE: Decisions to limit life-prolonging treatment (DLT) are often accompanied by psychological and ethical difficulties. The aim of the study is to investigate prevalence and intensity of moral distress (MD) as well as poten...

Late decisions about treatment limitation in ...

Article indépendant | MEHLIS, Katja | ESMO open | n°5 | vol.5

Background: Decisions to limit treatment (DLTs) are important to protect patients from overtreatment but constitute one of the most ethically challenging situations in oncology practice. In the Ethics Policy for Advance Care Plann...

Late decisions about treatment limitation in ...

Article indépendant | MEHLIS, Katja | ESMO open | n°5 | vol.5

Background: Decisions to limit treatment (DLTs) are important to protect patients from overtreatment but constitute one of the most ethically challenging situations in oncology practice. In the Ethics Policy for Advance Care Plann...

De la même série

Palliative medicine : providing care when cur...

Article | BUTLER, R.N. | Geriatrics | n°5 | vol.51

L'article fait la transcription d'une table ronde entre cinq médecins ; ceux-ci sont affiliés au "projet sur la mort" dont les objectifs sont rappelés dans un encadré. Le thème de cette discussion est le rôle de la médecine pallia...

Impact of psychosocial and palliative care tr...

Article indépendant | BASSAH, Nahyeni | JMIR research protocols | vol.14

BACKGROUND: Cancer is a leading cause of global mortality, accounting for nearly 10 million deaths in 2020. This is projected to increase by more than 60% by 2040, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Yet, palliative ...

Posttraumatic growth among suicide-loss survi...

Article indépendant | JMIR research protocols | vol.14

Background: Losing a loved one to suicide is an event that can have strong and potentially traumatic impacts on the lives of the bereaved survivors, especially regarding their grief, which can be complicated. These bereaved indivi...

A digital platform (Telepalliation) for patie...

Article indépendant | SIGAARD, Jarl Voss Andersen | JMIR research protocols | vol.13

BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization defines end-of-life palliative care as "prevention and relief of suffering, by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, p...

Participation in advance care planning among ...

Article indépendant | WALKNER, Tammy | JMIR research protocols | vol.13

BACKGROUND: Many of the challenges in advanced care planning (ACP) conversations are linked to the waxing and waning progress of serious illnesses. Conversations with patients about future medical care decisions by a surrogate dec...

Chargement des enrichissements...