- Erratum in:
- Intensive Care Med. 2008 Feb;34(2):392-3.
Reasons, considerations, difficulties and documentation of end-of-life decisions in European intensive care units: the ETHICUS Study.
Sprung CL,
Woodcock T,
Sjokvist P,
Ricou B,
Bulow HH,
Lippert A,
Maia P,
Cohen S,
Baras M,
Hovilehto S,
Ledoux D,
Phelan D,
Wennberg E,
Schobersberger W.
Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, General Intensive Care Unit, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, P.O. Box 12000, 91120 Jerusalem, , Israel. sprung@cc.huji.ac.il
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate physicians' reasoning, considerations and possible difficulties in end-of-life decision-making for patients in European intensive care units (ICUs). DESIGN: A prospective observational study. SETTING: Thirty-seven ICUs in 17 European countries. PATIENTS AND PARTICIPANTS: A total of 3,086 patients for whom an end-of-life decision was taken between January 1999 and June 2000. The dataset excludes patients who died after attempts at cardiopulmonary resuscitation and brain-dead patients. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Physicians indicated which of a pre-determined set of reasons for, considerations in, and difficulties with end-of-life decision-making was germane in each case as it arose. Overall, 2,134 (69%) of the decisions were documented in the medical record, with inter-regional differences in documentation practice. Primary reasons given by physicians for the decision mostly concerned the patient's medical condition (79%), especially unresponsive to therapy (46%), while chronic disease (12%), quality of life (4%), age (2%) and patient or family request (2%) were infrequent. Good medical practice (66%) and best interests (29%) were the commonest primary considerations reported, while resource allocation issues such as cost effectiveness (1%) and need for an ICU bed (0%) were uncommon. Living wills were considered in only 1% of cases. Physicians in central Europe reported no significant difficulty in 81% of cases, while in northern and southern regions there was no difficulty in 92-93% of cases. CONCLUSIONS: European ICU physicians do not experience difficulties with end-of-life decisions in most cases. Allocation of limited resources is a minor consideration and autonomous choices by patient or family remain unusual. Inter-regional differences were found.
PMID: 17992508 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]