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. 2024 Jun 13;23(1):148.
doi: 10.1186/s12904-024-01482-8.

Perception of diagnosis by family caregivers in severe brain injury patients in China

Affiliations

Perception of diagnosis by family caregivers in severe brain injury patients in China

Yifan Yan et al. BMC Palliat Care. .

Abstract

Objectives: Surrogate decision-making by family caregivers for patients with severe brain injury is influenced by the availability and understanding of relevant information and expectations for future rehabilitation. We aimed to compare the consistency of family caregivers' perceptions with clinical diagnoses and to inform their expectation of prognosis in the future.

Methods: The Coma Recovery Scale-Revised was used to assess the diagnosis of inpatients with severe brain injury between February 2019 and February 2020. A main family caregiver was included per patient. The family caregiver's perception of the patient's consciousness and expectations of future recovery were collected through questionnaires and compared consistently with the clinical diagnosis.

Results: The final sample included 101 main family caregivers of patients (57 UWS, unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, 37 MCS, minimally conscious state, 7 EMCS, emergence from MCS) with severe brain injury. Only 57 family caregivers correctly assessed the level of consciousness as indicated by the CRS-R, showing weak consistency (Kappa = 0.217, P = 0.002). Family caregivers' demographic characteristics and CRS-R diagnosis influenced the consistency between perception and clinical diagnosis. Family caregivers who provided hands-on care to patients showed higher levels of consistent perception (AOR = 12.24, 95% CI = 2.06-73.00, P = 0.006). Compared to UWS, the family caregivers of MCS patients were more likely to have a correct perception (OR = 7.68, 95% CI = 1.34-44.06). Family caregivers had positive expectations for patients' recovery in terms of both communication and returning to normal life.

Conclusion: Nearly half of family caregivers have inadequate understanding of their relative's level of consciousness, and most of them report overly optimistic expectations that do not align with clinical diagnosis. Providing more medical information to family caregivers to support their surrogate decision-making process is essential.

Keywords: Decision-making; Diagnosis; Ethics; Family caregivers; Severe brain injury.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Family caregivers’ expectations for future recovery of patients (N = 101). *UWS family caregivers (mean score = 2.86, median score = 3, with interquartile range 2 to 4) had lower expectations than MCS group (mean score = 3.54, median score = 3, with interquartile range 3 to 5) in returning to normal life (H2=-2.587, P = 0.029)

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