Outcomes of clinical ethics support near the end of life : a systematic review

Article indépendant

HALTAUFDERHEIDE, Joschka | NADOLNY, Stephan | GYSELS, Marjolein | BAUSEWEIN, Claudia | VOLLMANN, Jochen | SCHILDMANN, Jan

BACKGROUND: Clinical ethics support services have been advocated in recent decades. In clinical practice, clinical ethics support services are often requested for difficult decisions near the end of life. However, their contribution to improving healthcare has been questioned and demands for evaluation have been put forward. Research indicates that there are considerable challenges associated with defining adequate outcomes for clinical ethics support services. In this systematic review, we report findings of qualitative studies and surveys, which have been conducted to evaluate clinical ethics support services near the end of life. METHODS: Electronic databases and other sources were queried from 1970 to May 2018. Two authors screened studies independently. Methodological quality of studies was assessed. For each arm of the review, an individual synthesis was performed. Prospero ID: CRD42016036241. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS: Ethical approval is not needed as it is a systematic review of published literature. RESULTS: In all, 2088 hits on surveys and 2786 on qualitative studies were found. After screening, nine surveys and four qualitative studies were included. Survey studies report overall positive findings using a very wide and heterogeneous range of outcomes. Negative results were reported only occasionally. However, methodological quality and conceptual justification of used outcomes was often weak and limits generalizability of results. CONCLUSION: Evidence points to positive outcomes of clinical ethics support services. However, methodological quality needs to be improved. Further qualitative or mixed-method research on evaluating clinical ethics support services may contribute to the development of evaluating outcomes of clinical ethics support services by means of broaden the range of appropriate (process-oriented) outcomes of (different types of) clinical ethics support services.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969733019878840

Voir la revue «Nursing ethics»

Autres numéros de la revue «Nursing ethics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Outcomes of clinical ethics support near the ...

Article indépendant | HALTAUFDERHEIDE, Joschka | Nursing ethics

BACKGROUND: Clinical ethics support services have been advocated in recent decades. In clinical practice, clinical ethics support services are often requested for difficult decisions near the end of life. However, their contributi...

Terminological confusion about sedation in pa...

Article indépendant | KREMLING, Alexander | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE

Background: Terminological problems concerning sedation in palliative care and consequences for research and clinical decision making have been reported frequently. Objectives: To gather data on the application of definitions of s...

Breaking bad news: experiences, views and dif...

Article | SCHILDMANN, Jan | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.19

Il s'agit d'analyser le rôle et les perceptions de ces jeunes médecins anglais en poste hospitalier lorsqu'ils doivent informer les patients atteints de maladie grave. Cette pratique médicale a été analysée à partir d'un questionn...

De la même série

Valuing the individual - evaluating the digni...

Article indépendant | SODERMAN, Annika | Nursing ethics | n°1 | vol.30

Background: Palliative care needs in older persons can endanger their dignity. To provide dignity-conserving care to older persons, the Swedish Dignity Care Intervention (DCI-SWE) can be used. The DCI-SWE is built on Chochinov's d...

Caregivers' perception of teenagers' dignity ...

Article indépendant | MOHAMMADI, Fateme | Nursing ethics | n°1 | vol.30

Introduction: Maintaining patient dignity in a caregiving environment is one of the most important moral responsibilities for caregivers. Nonetheless, there are vulnerable groups, specifically teenagers, who in their final stages ...

Multi-dimensional approach to end-of-life car...

Article indépendant | SIM, Shin Wei | Nursing ethics

Appropriate and balanced decision-making is sentinel to goal setting and the provision of appropriate clinical care that are attuned to preserving the best interests of the patient. Current family-led decision-making in family-cen...

"To die, to sleep" : assisted dying legislati...

Article indépendant | GILBERT, Julia | Nursing ethics

BACKGROUND:: Assisted dying remains an emotive topic globally with a number of countries initiating legislation to allow individuals access to assisted dying measures. Victoria will become the first Australian state in over 13 yea...

Comparison of Thai older patients' wishes and...

Article indépendant | MANJAVONG, Manchumad | Nursing ethics

BACKGROUND: Achieving a "good death" is a major goal of palliative care. Nurses play a key role in the end-of-life care of older patients. Understanding the perceptions of both older patients and nurses in this area could help imp...

Chargement des enrichissements...