Ethical issues referred to clinical ethics support at a university hospital in Korea : three-year experience after enforcement of life-sustaining treatment decisions act

Article indépendant

YOO, Shin Hye | KIM, Yejin | CHOI, Wonho | SHIN, Jeongmi | KIM, Min Sun | PARK, Hye Yoon | KEAM, Bhumsuk | YIM, Jae-Joon

BACKGROUND: Clinical ethics support is a form of preventive ethics aimed at mediating ethics-related conflicts and managing ethical issues arising in the healthcare setting. However, limited evidence exists regarding the specific ethical issues in clinical practice. This study aimed to explore the diverse ethical issues of cases referred to clinical ethics support after the new legislation on hospice palliative care and end-of-life decision-making was implemented in Korea in 2018. METHODS: A retrospective study of cases referred to clinical ethics support at a university hospital in Korea from February 2018 to February 2021 was conducted. The ethical issues at the time of referral were analyzed via qualitative content analysis of the ethics consultation-related documents. RESULTS: A total of 60 cases of 57 patients were included in the study, of whom 52.6% were men and 56.1% were older than 60 years of age. The majority of cases (80%) comprised patients from the intensive care unit. One-third of the patients were judged as being at the end-of-life stage. The most frequent ethical categories were identified as goals of care/treatment (78.3%), decision-making (75%), relationship (41.7%), and end-of-life issues (31.7%). More specifically, best interests (71.7%), benefits and burdens/harms (61.7%), refusal (53.3%), and surrogate decision-making (33.3%), followed by withholding or withdrawal (28.3%) were the most frequent ethical issues reported, which became diversified by year. In addition, the ethical issues appeared to differ by age group and judgment of the end-of-life stage. CONCLUSION: The findings of this study expand the current understanding of the diverse ethical issues including decision-making and goals of care/treatment that have been referred to clinical ethics support since the enforcement of the new legislation in Korea. This study suggests a need for further research on the longitudinal exploration of ethical issues and implementation of clinical ethics support in multiple healthcare centers.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3346/jkms.2023.38.e182

Voir la revue «Journal of Korean medical science, 38»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of Korean medical science»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Ethical issues referred to clinical ethics su...

Article indépendant | YOO, Shin Hye | Journal of Korean medical science | n°24 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Clinical ethics support is a form of preventive ethics aimed at mediating ethics-related conflicts and managing ethical issues arising in the healthcare setting. However, limited evidence exists regarding the specific ...

Antibiotic prescription patterns during last ...

Article | KIM, Jeong-Han | The journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy | n°7 | vol.78

Objectives: Issues regarding antibiotic use in end-of-life patients with advanced cancer present a challenging ethical dilemma in academic referral centres. This study aimed to investigate the role of palliative care consultation ...

Antibiotic prescription patterns during last ...

Article indépendant | KIM, Jeong-Han | The journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy | n°7 | vol.78

Objectives: Issues regarding antibiotic use in end-of-life patients with advanced cancer present a challenging ethical dilemma in academic referral centres. This study aimed to investigate the role of palliative care consultation ...

De la même série

The impact of withdrawing or withholding of l...

Article indépendant | KIM, Claire Junga | Journal of Korean medical science | n°6 | vol.39

This study measured the impact of the Decisions on Life-Sustaining Treatment Act by analyzing medical cost data from the National Health Insurance Service-National Sample Cohort. After identifying the patients who died in 2018 and...

Beyond legal boundaries : public and clinicia...

Article indépendant | SONG, In Gyu | Journal of Korean medical science | n°25 | vol.39

BACKGROUND: Despite medical advancements in neonatal survival rates, many children have poor neurological outcomes. Because the law in Korea restricts the withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment to only cases of imminent death, tr...

Temporal change in the use of laboratory and ...

Article indépendant | KIM, Hyun Ah | Journal of Korean medical science | n°12 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: To analyze the trends in laboratory and imaging test use 1 week before death among decedents who died in Korean hospitals, tests used per decedents from 2006 to 2015 were examined by using the National Health Insurance...

Use of antibiotics within the last 14 days of...

Article indépendant | WI, Yu Mi | Journal of Korean medical science | n°9 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial prescriptions for serious chronic or acute illness nearing its end stages raise concerns about the potential for futile use, adverse events, increased multidrug-resistant organisms, and significant patien...

Ethical issues referred to clinical ethics su...

Article indépendant | YOO, Shin Hye | Journal of Korean medical science | n°24 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Clinical ethics support is a form of preventive ethics aimed at mediating ethics-related conflicts and managing ethical issues arising in the healthcare setting. However, limited evidence exists regarding the specific ...

Chargement des enrichissements...