Initiating end-of-life decisions with parents of infants receiving neonatal intensive care

Article indépendant

SHAW, Chloe | CONNABEER, Kathrina | DREW, Paul | GALLAGHER, Katie | ALADANGADY, Narendra | MARLOW, Neil

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether parent-initiated or doctor-initiated decisions about limiting life-sustaining treatment (LST) in neonatal care has consequences for how possible courses of action are presented. METHOD: Formal conversations (n = 27) between doctors and parents of critically ill babies from two level 3 neonatal intensive care units were audio or video recorded. Sequences of talk where decisions about limiting LST were presented were analysed using Conversation Analysis and coded using a Conversation Analytic informed coding framework. Relationships between codes were analysed using Fisher's exact test. RESULTS: When parents initiated the decision point, doctors subsequently tended to refer to or list available options. When doctors initiated, they tended to use 'recommendations' or 'single-option' choice (conditional) formats (p=0.017) that did not include multiple treatment options. Parent initiations overwhelmingly concerned withdrawal, as opposed to withholding of LST (p=0.030). CONCLUSION: Aligning parents to the trajectory of the news about their baby's poor condition may influence how the doctor subsequently presents the decision to limit LST, and thereby the extent to which parents are invited to participate in shared decision-making. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Explicitly proposing treatment options may provide parents with opportunities to be involved in decisions for their critically ill babies, thereby fostering shared decision-making.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2020.02.013

Voir la revue «Patient education and counseling»

Autres numéros de la revue «Patient education and counseling»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Initiating end-of-life decisions with parents...

Article | SHAW, Chloe | Patient education and counseling

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether parent-initiated or doctor-initiated decisions about limiting life-sustaining treatment (LST) in neonatal care has consequences for how possible courses of action are presented. METHOD: Formal con...

Initiating end-of-life decisions with parents...

Article indépendant | SHAW, Chloe | Patient education and counseling

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether parent-initiated or doctor-initiated decisions about limiting life-sustaining treatment (LST) in neonatal care has consequences for how possible courses of action are presented. METHOD: Formal con...

End-of-life decision making between doctors a...

Article indépendant | SHAW, Chloe | Health communication

We report the development and assessment of a novel coding framework in the context of research into neonatal end-of-life decision making conversations. Data comprised 27 formal conversations between doctors and parents of critica...

De la même série

Can shared decision-making interventions incr...

Article indépendant | STROKES, Natalie | Patient education and counseling | vol.135

OBJECTIVES: To summarize the existing literature on the impact of shared decision-making (SDM) interventions on patient trust, with a focus on the specific characteristics that influence the effectiveness of each intervention rega...

Designing and maturing the OKRA-Compass for b...

Article indépendant | DITTMER, Kerstin | Patient education and counseling | vol.134

OBJECTIVE: Breaking Bad News (BBN) is challenging in pediatric oncology. It requires tailored, sensitive communication to families and children at critical moments. However, pediatric oncology lacks context-specific BBN support to...

Development and testing of a generic patient ...

Article indépendant | JENSEN, Hanne Irene | Patient education and counseling | vol.132

OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to develop and test a patient decision aid for end-of-life care to be used when some or all life-sustaining treatments have been withheld or withdrawn. METHODS: A multi-professional, mul...

Tips from clinicians about if, when, and how ...

Article indépendant | BROTZMAN, Laura E. | Patient education and counseling | vol.131

OBJECTIVES: Estimates of life expectancy can inform clinical recommendations and decisions for older adults, but many clinicians find it difficult to discuss. We interviewed primary care clinicians to identify best practices for d...

The information and communication needs of pa...

Article indépendant | HOLLAND-HART, Daniella | Patient education and counseling | vol.131

OBJECTIVES: This review aimed to collate evidence on the key information and communication needs of patients with advanced incurable cancer and their caregivers. It also sought to identify barriers and facilitators to communicatin...

Chargement des enrichissements...