Last week, over one hundred physicians, nurses, and other health professionals gathered at the Feinstein Institute for a day-long learning session on Advanced Illness. Some conferences add to what you know. Once in a while, as in this case, a conference changes the way you think.
Some of the take-aways are obvious. Conversations about end-of-life care need to happen long before the patient arrives in our ED or in the ICU. So we need to engage our community partners. These encounters are hard to have in the office (with or without federal funding) and hard to have in the hospital, because they are emotionally stressful, because they take time we don't always have, and because we need better skills. Additionally, advance directives don’t solve the problem. Identifying a healthcare Agent is a good idea. But what good is it, really, if the physician and his team lack the skills to guide the individual, respectfully and empathetically, through the difficult choices to be made, honoring the patient’s autonomy while providing clear professional advice? And Living Wills are of little help, with their boiler-plate language which rarely squares with clinical reality: “I want to forego X, Y and Z…in the event that there is no reasonable hope of my recovery…”
Here’s the real crux of the issue. Too often we fail to grasp the essential question. And so, with the best of intentions, we ask meaningless, or even harmful questions: “Do you want us to do everything?”…or this variant… “If your heart were to stop, what measures would you like us to take?” At their core, questions like these ask “which do you prefer, Mr. Smith, life or death?” This question and its variants, often asked in a vacuum, are unhelpful, confusing and distressing to patients and families.
How, as a medical community, can we do better? First, we must listen closely, and that includes listening to ourselves. If we were the patient, would we sound like we care? And like we were making sense? Second, we need helpful guidelines for end-of-life discussions. I have excerpted below a standard reference in the field of Palliative medicine. Not every discussion will be a fully formed family meeting. But there are steps that must precede any discussion about the plan of care when cure is no longer a realistic goal. (A training program for practitioners is just now getting underway at our Center for Learning and Innovation.)
We know that as physicians it is our role to help - this is our motivation and our defining characteristic. This is also the principle of beneficence, and it stands arm-in-arm with the reciprocal obligation to avoid harm ("non-maleficence"). What this means, practically speaking, is that we should never feel compelled to offer interventions that in our judgment will not help, and most especially we should avoid these when they add to suffering. Sometimes the pursuit of these principles will put us at odds with a family. But there are those around you who can help, including our colleagues in the Palliative Medicine program, the Bioethics consultation service, and, finally, clinical leadership.
There is tremendous opportunity here. I look forward to working with many of you - our exceptionally committed and talented physicians - to spread information, skills and a new culture of caring that does credit to our institution and does right by the patients and families who depend on us.
Communicating about Withholding or Withdrawing
Therapies and
Shifting Goals from Cure toward Comfort, Dignity and Quality of
Life
1. Establish the Setting
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Review relevant information.
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Patient's prognosis
Outcome of therapy in question in this
patient
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Make sure the right people are there.
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Patient's or surrogate's loved ones
Staff
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Find a comfortable, quiet location.
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Places for everyone to sit
Seclusion from others
Ability of everyone to see and hear each
other
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Introduce the topic for discussion.
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“I was hoping we could talk about the next
steps in your care.”
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2. Review the Patient's Situation
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Elicit the patient's or surrogate's understanding.
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“Can you tell me your understanding of what
is going on with your medical situation?”
“What have the other doctors told you about
your dad's medical situation?”
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Educate as needed.
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“That's right, the cancer has spread. What
that means is that although there are treatments
to control the symptoms, we can't cure the
cancer.”
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3. Review Overall Goals of Care
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Elicit goals from the patient or surrogate.
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“Did you talk with Dr. Smith about what the
goal of your treatments should be?”
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Summarize to confirm.
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“So it sounds like the most important thing
is to make sure your father is comfortable.”
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4. Relate Your Recommendation for
Withholding or Withdrawing Treatment
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Introduce the specific treatment to be
discussed.
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“Today I wanted to talk about what we should
do if your breathing gets worse, including
whether we should use a breathing machine.”
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Ask about previous experience with the
intervention in question.
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“Has anyone ever asked you about being on a
breathing machine?”
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Describe the intervention in question and
its benefits and burdens for this patient.
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“Based on what we’ve talked about—the fact
that this cancer isn't curable—the chance of
being able to come off the breathing machine
would be very low.”
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State your recommendation.
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“I recommend that if your breathing gets
worse we don't put you on a breathing machine.”
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Describe how you feel your plans are
consistent with the patient's overall goals.
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“The reason I think we shouldn't is that you
said you wouldn't want your life to be prolonged
if there wasn't a good chance of recovering
to where you are now.”
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Describe what treatments will be provided.
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“We will use medicines to improve your
breathing and comfort.”
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5. Respond to Patient or Surrogate
Reaction
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Acknowledge emotions.
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“It's hard getting to this point, isn't it?”
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Is the recommendation consistent with
patient's values and goals?
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“How does that plan sound to you?”
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Answer questions.
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“I’ll be around if you think of things you
want to ask me later, but are there questions can
I
answer now?”
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6. Summarize and Establish Follow-Up
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Summarize.
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“Good. So we’ll keep the antibiotics going
and give you medicines if the breathing gets worse,
but we won't put you on a breathing
machine.”
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Explain the next steps in treatment.
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“We’ll plan on keeping you here in the
hospital for the next few days and see how things go.”
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Arrange for the next meeting.
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“I’ll see you tomorrow on rounds. Please
have your nurse page me if you need anything before
then."
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