Hospital Culture and Intensity of End-of-Life Care at 3 Academic Medical Centers

被引:11
|
作者
Dzeng, Elizabeth [1 ,2 ,3 ,11 ]
Batten, Jason N. [4 ,5 ]
Dohan, Daniel [2 ]
Blythe, Jacob [6 ]
Ritchie, Christine S. [7 ,8 ]
Curtis, J. Randall [9 ,10 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Div Hosp Med, Dept Med, San Francisco, CA USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Philip R Lee Inst Hlth Policy Studies, San Francisco, CA USA
[3] Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst, London, England
[4] Stanford Univ, Dept Anesthesia Perioperat & Pain Med, Stanford, CA USA
[5] Stanford Univ, Stanford Ctr Biomed Ethics, Stanford, CA USA
[6] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Radiol, Boston, MA USA
[7] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Med, Div Palliat Care & Geriatr Med, Boston, MA USA
[8] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Mongan Inst Ctr Aging & Serious Illness, Dept Med, Boston, MA USA
[9] Univ Washington, Dept Med, Div Pulm & Crit Care Med, Seattle, WA USA
[10] Univ Washington, Cambia Palliat Care Ctr Excellence, Seattle, WA USA
[11] Univ Calif San Francisco, UCSF Div Hosp Med, 521 Parnassus Ave,5th Floor,Box 0131, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
关键词
CHRONIC CRITICAL ILLNESS; NURSING-HOME RESIDENTS; ADVANCE DIRECTIVES; MECHANICAL VENTILATION; SUSTAINING TREATMENTS; DECISION-MAKING; PALLIATIVE CARE; UNITED-STATES; BENEFICIARIES; ASSOCIATION;
D O I
10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.2450
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
IMPORTANCE There is substantial institutional variability in the intensity of end-of-life care that is not explained by patient preferences. Hospital culture and institutional structures (eg, policies, practices, protocols, resources) might contribute to potentially nonbeneficial high-intensity life-sustaining treatments near the end of life. OBJECTIVE To understand the role of hospital culture in the everyday dynamics of high-intensity end-of-life care. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This comparative ethnographic studywas conducted at 3 academic hospitals in California andWashington that differed in end-of-life care intensity based on measures in the Dartmouth Atlas and included hospital-based clinicians, administrators, and leaders. Data were deductively and inductively analyzed using thematic analysis through an iterative coding process. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURE Institution-specific policies, practices, protocols, and resources and their role in the everyday dynamics of potentially nonbeneficial, high-intensity life-sustaining treatments. RESULTS A total of 113 semistructured, in-depth interviews (66 women [58.4%]; 23 [20.4%] Asian, 1 [0.9%] Black, 5 [4.4%] Hispanic, 7 [6.2%] multiracial, and 70 [61.9%] White individuals) were conducted with inpatient-based clinicians and administrators between December 2018 and June 2022. Respondents at all hospitals described default tendencies to provide high-intensity treatments that they believed were universal in US hospitals. They also reported that proactive, concerted efforts among multiple care teams were required to deescalate high-intensity treatments. Efforts to deescalate were vulnerable to being undermined at multiple points during a patient's care trajectory by any individual or entity. Respondents described institution-specific policies, practices, protocols, and resources that engendered broadly held understandings of the importance of deescalating nonbeneficial life-sustaining treatments. Respondents at different hospitals reported different policies and practices that encouraged or discouraged deescalation. They described how these institutional structures contributed to the culture and everyday dynamics of end-of-life care at their institution. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this qualitative study, clinicians, administrators, and leaders at the hospitals studied reported that they work in a hospital culture in which high-intensity end-of-life care constitutes a default trajectory. Institutional structures and hospital cultures shape the everyday dynamics by which clinicians may deescalate end-of-life patients from this trajectory. Individual behaviors or interactions may fail to mitigate potentially nonbeneficial high-intensity life-sustaining treatments if extant hospital culture or a lack of supportive policies and practices undermine individual efforts. Hospital cultures need to be considered when developing policies and interventions to decrease potentially nonbeneficial, high-intensity life-sustaining treatments.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:839 / 848
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] BOARD 118 - Barriers to pediatric end-of-life care in an academic children's hospital
    Hughes, A
    Davies, B
    Partridge, C
    Kramer, R
    Cooper, B
    JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE, 2004, 20 (03) : 257 - 257
  • [22] Hospital end-of-life care in haematological malignancies
    Beaussant, Yvan
    Daguindau, Etienne
    Chauchet, Adrien
    Rochigneux, Philippe
    Tournigand, Christophe
    Aubry, Regis
    Morin, Lucas
    BMJ SUPPORTIVE & PALLIATIVE CARE, 2018, 8 (03) : 314 - 324
  • [23] HOME AND/OR HOSPITAL The Architectures of End-of-Life Care
    Adams, Annmarie
    CHANGE OVER TIME-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSERVATION AND THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 6 (02): : 248 - 263
  • [24] Hospital Executives' Perceptions of End-of-Life Care
    Garner, Kimberly K.
    Lefler, Leanne L.
    McSweeney, Jean C.
    Dubbert, Patricia M.
    Sullivan, Dennis H.
    Kirchner, JoAnn E.
    SAGE OPEN, 2015, 5 (02):
  • [25] Responding to SUPPORT: An academic medical center examines its end-of-life care practices
    Dendaas, N
    Pellino, TA
    Roberts, KF
    Cleary, J
    JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2001, 21 (02) : 121 - 128
  • [26] End-of-Life Care: medical and therapeutic aspects
    Poels, Marcel
    Joppich, Robin
    ANASTHESIOLOGIE INTENSIVMEDIZIN NOTFALLMEDIZIN SCHMERZTHERAPIE, 2023, 58 (07/08): : 436 - 447
  • [27] End-of-life care in the Dutch medical curricula
    de Bruin, Josefien
    Verhoef, Mary-Joanne
    Slaets, Joris P. J.
    van Bodegom, David
    PERSPECTIVES ON MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2018, 7 (05) : 325 - 331
  • [28] Medical Overuse in Pediatric End-of-Life Care
    Jichlinski, Amanda
    JAMA PEDIATRICS, 2018, 172 (05) : 495 - 496
  • [29] Disparities in the Intensity of End-of-Life Care for Children With Cancer
    Johnston, Emily E.
    Alvarez, Elysia
    Saynina, Olga
    Sanders, Lee
    Bhatia, Smita
    Chamberlain, Lisa J.
    PEDIATRICS, 2017, 140 (04)
  • [30] End-of-Life Care, Not End-of-Life Spending
    Jha, Ashish K.
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2018, 320 (07): : 631 - 632