Withdrawal of life support: intensive caring at the end of life
- PMID: 12460097
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.288.21.2732
Withdrawal of life support: intensive caring at the end of life
Abstract
The technology and expertise of critical care practice support patients through life-threatening illnesses. Most recover; some die quickly; others, however, linger--neither improving nor acutely dying, alive but with a dwindling capacity to recover from their injury or illness. Management of these patients is often dominated by the question: Is it appropriate to continue life-sustaining therapy? Patients rarely participate in these pivotal discussions because they are either too sick or too heavily sedated. As a result, the decision often falls to the family or the surrogate decision maker, in consultation with the medical team. Decisions of such import are emotionally stressful and are often a source of disagreement. Failure to resolve such disagreements may create conflict that compromises patient care, engenders guilt among family members, and creates dissatisfaction for health care professionals. However, the potential for strained communications is mitigated if clinicians provide timely clinical and prognostic information and support the patient and family with aggressive symptom control, a comfortable setting, and continuous psychosocial support. Effective communication includes sharing the burden of decision making with family members. This shift from individual responsibility to patient-focused consensus often permits the family to understand, perhaps reluctantly and with great sadness, that intensive caring may involve letting go of life-sustaining interventions.
Comment in
-
Shared decision making about withdrawing treatment.JAMA. 2003 Feb 26;289(8):981; author reply 981. doi: 10.1001/jama.289.8.981a. JAMA. 2003. PMID: 12597737 No abstract available.
Similar articles
-
Letting go: family willingness to forgo life support.Heart Lung. 1996 Nov-Dec;25(6):483-94. doi: 10.1016/s0147-9563(96)80051-3. Heart Lung. 1996. PMID: 8950128
-
Conflict associated with decisions to limit life-sustaining treatment in intensive care units.J Gen Intern Med. 2001 May;16(5):283-9. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.2001.00419.x. J Gen Intern Med. 2001. PMID: 11359545 Free PMC article.
-
Life support withdrawal: communication and conflict.Am J Crit Care. 2003 Nov;12(6):548-55. Am J Crit Care. 2003. PMID: 14619361
-
Family dynamics in end-of-life treatment decisions.Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 1994 Jul;16(4):251-8. doi: 10.1016/0163-8343(94)90004-3. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 1994. PMID: 7926701 Review.
-
End-of-life decision making in the intensive care unit.Intensive Care Med. 2000 Oct;26(10):1414-20. doi: 10.1007/s001340000641. Intensive Care Med. 2000. PMID: 11126250 Review.
Cited by
-
Transcultural Adaptation and Validation of Quality of Dying and Death Questionnaire in Medical Intensive Care Units in South Korea.Acute Crit Care. 2018 May;33(2):95-101. doi: 10.4266/acc.2017.00612. Epub 2018 May 31. Acute Crit Care. 2018. PMID: 31723869 Free PMC article.
-
Perioperative do-not-resuscitate orders--doing 'nothing' when 'something' can be done.Crit Care. 2006;10(4):219. doi: 10.1186/cc4929. Crit Care. 2006. PMID: 16834763 Free PMC article. Review.
-
[Patients' declared intentions and emergency medicine].Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed. 2016 Mar;111(2):113-7. doi: 10.1007/s00063-015-0086-z. Epub 2015 Sep 15. Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed. 2016. PMID: 26374338 Review. German.
-
Ethics and gastrointestinal artificial feeding.Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2004 Aug;6(4):314-9. doi: 10.1007/s11894-004-0084-4. Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2004. PMID: 15245701 Review.
-
Development of a post-intensive care unit storytelling intervention for surrogates involved in decisions to limit life-sustaining treatment.Palliat Support Care. 2015 Jun;13(3):451-63. doi: 10.1017/S1478951513001211. Epub 2014 Feb 13. Palliat Support Care. 2015. PMID: 24524736 Free PMC article.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials