Quality of Documented Consent for the De-escalation of Care on a General and Trauma Surgery Service

被引:0
|
作者
Thomasson, Joseph [1 ]
Petros, Tommy [1 ]
Lorenzo-Rivero, Shauna [1 ]
Moore, Richard A. [1 ]
Stanley, J. Daniel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tennessee, Coll Med, Dept Surg, Chattanooga, TN 37406 USA
关键词
ADVANCE DIRECTIVES; LIFE-SUPPORT; UNIT; END;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Postoperative and posttrauma mortality in the acute care setting often occurs after a decision for de-escalation of care. It is important that the quality of consent for de-escalation of care is maintained to ensure patient autonomy. This retrospective review aims to determine the quality of the consent process for care de-escalation in patients on a trauma and general surgery service who sustained in-hospital mortality. One hundred thirty-three patients (99 trauma) were identified who died in 1 year. Of these patient deaths, 80 (60%) involved de-escalation of care. In three (3%) cases, there were no documented discussions for de-escalation consent. Of the remaining cases, documentation was considered optimal 21 per cent of the time. Only nine (11%) patients were able to participate in a discussion of their end-of-life care. The other 23 patients who were initially competent lost their ability to participate in discussions after a debilitating event. In this study, the majority of patients who died on a surgical service underwent a de-escalation of care. The documentation quality was suboptimal in most cases. Earlier and more thorough discussion of the patient's end-of-life wishes may improve the de-escalation of care consent process.
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页码:883 / 887
页数:5
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