Hastening death in Canadian ICUs : end-of-life care in the era of medical assistance in dying

Article indépendant

ANDERSEN, Sarah K. | STEWART, Samuel | LEIER, Brendan | ALDEN, Lynn E. | TOWNSEND, Derek R. | GARROS, Daniel

OBJECTIVES: Since 2016, Canada has allowed for euthanasia based on strict criteria under federal medical assistance in dying legislation. The purpose of this study was to determine how Canadian intensivists perceive medical assistance in dying and whether they believe their approach to withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies has changed following introduction of medical assistance in dying. DESIGN: Electronic survey. SETTING: Participants were recruited from 11 PICU programs and 14 adult ICU programs across Canada. All program leaders for whom contact information was available were approached for participation. PARTICIPANTS: We invited intensivists and critical care trainees employed between December 2019 and May 2020 to participate using a snowball sampling technique in which department leaders distributed study information. All responses were anonymous. Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Categorical variables were analyzed using Pearson chi-square test. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We obtained 150 complete questionnaires (33% response rate), of which 50% were adult practitioners and 50% pediatric. Most were from academic centers (81%, n = 121). Of respondents, 86% (n = 130) were familiar with medical assistance in dying legislation, 71% in favor, 14% conflicted, and 11% opposed. Only 5% (n = 8) thought it had influenced their approach to withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies. Half of participants had no standardized protocol for withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies in their unit, and 41% (n = 62) had observed medications given in disproportionately high doses during withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies, with 13% having personally administered such doses. Most (80%, n = 120) had experienced explicit requests from families to hasten death, and almost half (47%, n = 70) believed it was ethically permissible to intentionally hasten death following withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies. CONCLUSIONS: Most Canadian intensivists surveyed do not think that medical assistance in dying has changed their approach to end of life in the ICU. A significant minority are ethically conflicted about the current approach to assisted dying/euthanasia in Canada. Almost half believe it is ethical to intentionally hasten death during withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies if death is expected.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CCM.0000000000005359

Voir la revue «Critical care medicine»

Autres numéros de la revue «Critical care medicine»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Has medical assistance in dying changed end-o...

Article | ANDERSEN, Sarah K. | Journal of critical care | vol.72

Purpose: Since 2016, Canada has permitted medical assistance in dying (MAID). Our aims were to understand how Canadian intensivists view MAID and the impact of MAID on end-of-life care in the ICU. Material and Methods: This was a ...

Has medical assistance in dying changed end-o...

Article indépendant | ANDERSEN, Sarah K. | Journal of critical care | vol.72

Purpose: Since 2016, Canada has permitted medical assistance in dying (MAID). Our aims were to understand how Canadian intensivists view MAID and the impact of MAID on end-of-life care in the ICU. Material and Methods: This was a ...

Has medical assistance in dying changed end-o...

Article indépendant | ANDERSEN, Sarah K. | Journal of critical care | vol.72

Purpose: Since 2016, Canada has permitted medical assistance in dying (MAID). Our aims were to understand how Canadian intensivists view MAID and the impact of MAID on end-of-life care in the ICU. Material and Methods: This was a ...

De la même série

Early palliative care consultation in the med...

Article indépendant | MA, Jessica | Critical care medicine | n°12 | vol.477

OBJECTIVES: To assess the impact of early triggered palliative care consultation on the outcomes of high-risk ICU patients. DESIGN: Single-center cluster randomized crossover trial. SETTING: Two medical ICUs at Barnes Jewish Hospi...

Trajectories of palliative care needs in the ...

Article indépendant | COX, Christopher E. | Critical care medicine | n°1 | vol.51

OBJECTIVES: While palliative care needs are assumed to improve during ICU care, few empiric data exist on need trajectories or their impact on long-term outcomes. We aimed to describe trajectories of palliative care needs during I...

Stability of do-not-resuscitate orders in hos...

Article indépendant | MEHTA, Anuj B. | Critical care medicine | n°2 | vol.49

OBJECTIVES: Prior work has shown substantial between-hospital variation in do-not-resuscitate orders, but stability of do-not-resuscitate preferences between hospitalizations and the institutional influence on do-not-resuscitate r...

Palliative and end-of-life care : prioritizin...

Article indépendant | ASLAKSON, Rebecca A. | Critical care medicine | n°10 | vol.49

ICUs are a setting for high severity illness and mortality and were developed to optimize nursing care and medical outcomes for the most seriously ill. Approximately one in five deaths in the United States occurs during or shortly...

Admission to intensive care for palliative ca...

Article indépendant | MELVILLE, Andrew | Critical care medicine | n°10 | vol.45

OBJECTIVES: To describe the characteristics, circumstances, change over time, resource use, and outcomes of patients admitted to ICUs in Australia and New Zealand for the purposes of "palliative care of a dying patient" or "potent...

Chargement des enrichissements...