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Coaching doctors to improve ethical decision-making in adult hospitalized patients potentially receiving excessive treatment. The CODE stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial.

Authors :
Benoit, Dominique D.
De Pauw, Aglaja
Jacobs, Celine
Moors, Ine
Offner, Fritz
Velghe, Anja
Van Den Noortgate, Nele
Depuydt, Pieter
Druwé, Patrick
Hemelsoet, Dimitri
Meurs, Alfred
Malotaux, Jiska
Van Biesen, Wim
Verbeke, Francis
Derom, Eric
Stevens, Dieter
De Pauw, Michel
Tromp, Fiona
Van Vlierberghe, Hans
Callebout, Eduard
Source :
Intensive Care Medicine. Oct2024, Vol. 50 Issue 10, p1635-1646. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to assess whether coaching doctors to enhance ethical decision-making in teams improves (1) goal-oriented care operationalized via written do-not-intubate and do-not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DNI-DNACPR) orders in adult patients potentially receiving excessive treatment (PET) during their first hospital stay and (2) the quality of the ethical climate. Methods: We carried out a stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial in the medical intensive care unit (ICU) and 9 referring internal medicine departments of Ghent University Hospital between February 2022 and February 2023. Doctors and nurses in charge of hospitalized patients filled out the ethical decision-making climate questionnaire (ethical decision-making climate questionnaire, EDMCQ) before and after the study, and anonymously identified PET via an electronic alert during the entire study period. All departments were randomly assigned to a 4-month coaching. At least one month of coaching was compared to less than one month coaching and usual care. The first primary endpoint was the incidence of written DNI-DNACPR decisions. The second primary endpoint was the EDMCQ before and after the study period. Because clinicians identified less PET than required to detect a difference in written DNI-DNACPR decisions, a post-hoc analysis on the overall population was performed. To reduce type I errors, we further restricted the analysis to one of our predefined secondary endpoints (mortality up to 1 year). Results: Of the 442 and 423 clinicians working before and after the study period, respectively 270 (61%) and 261 (61.7%) filled out the EDMCQ. Fifty of the 93 (53.7%) doctors participated in the coaching for a mean (standard deviation [SD]) of 4.36 (2.55) sessions. Of the 7254 patients, 125 (1.7%) were identified as PET, with 16 missing outcome data. Twenty-six of the PET and 624 of the overall population already had a written DNI-DNACPR decision at study entry, resulting in 83 and 6614 patients who were included in the main and post hoc analysis, respectively. The estimated incidence of written DNI-DNACPR decisions in the intervention vs. control arm was, respectively, 29.7% vs. 19.6% (odds ratio 4.24, 95% confidence interval 4.21–4.27; P < 0.001) in PET and 3.4% vs. 1.9% (1.65, 1.12–2.43; P = 0.011) in the overall study population. The estimated mortality at one year was respectively 85% vs. 83.7% (hazard ratio 2.76, 1.26–6.04; P = 0.011) and 14.5% vs. 15.1% (0.89, 0.72–1.09; P = 0.251). The mean difference in EDMCQ before and after the study period was 0.02 points (− 0.18 to 0.23; P = 0.815). Conclusion: This study suggests that coaching doctors regarding ethical decision-making in teams safely improves goal-oriented care operationalized via written DNI-DNACPR decisions in hospitalized patients, however without concomitantly improving the quality of the ethical climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03424642
Volume :
50
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Intensive Care Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180037560
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-024-07588-0