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How doctors manage conflicts with families of critically ill patients during conversations about end-of-life decisions in neonatal, pediatric, and adult intensive care

Authors :
Amber S. Spijkers
Aranka Akkermans
Ellen M. A. Smets
Marcus J. Schultz
Thomas G. V. Cherpanath
Job B. M. van Woensel
Marc van Heerde
Anton H. van Kaam
Moniek van de Loo
Dick L. Willems
Mirjam A. de Vos
Graduate School
Medical Psychology
APH - Personalized Medicine
APH - Quality of Care
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Intensive Care Medicine
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
ACS - Diabetes & metabolism
ACS - Microcirculation
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Paediatric Intensive Care
ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development
Neonatology
General practice
Public and occupational health
APH - Aging & Later Life
Paediatrics
Ethics, Law & Medical humanities
Pediatric surgery
Source :
Spijkers, A S, Akkermans, A, Smets, E M A, Schultz, M J, Cherpanath, T G V, van Woensel, J B M, van Heerde, M, van Kaam, A H, van de Loo, M, Willems, D L & de Vos, M A 2022, ' How doctors manage conflicts with families of critically ill patients during conversations about end-of-life decisions in neonatal, pediatric, and adult intensive care ', Intensive Care Medicine, vol. 48, no. 7, pp. 910-922 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-022-06771-5, Intensive care medicine, 48(7), 910-922. Springer Verlag, Intensive Care Medicine, 48(7), 910-922. Springer Verlag
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Purpose: Intensive care is a stressful environment in which team-family conflicts commonly occur. If managed poorly, conflicts can have negative effects on all parties involved. Previous studies mainly investigated these conflicts and their management in a retrospective way. This study aimed to prospectively explore team-family conflicts, including its main topics, complicating factors, doctors’ conflict management strategies and the effect of these strategies. Methods: Conversations between doctors in the neonatal, pediatric, and adult intensive care unit of a large university-based hospital and families of critically ill patients were audio-recorded from the moment doubts arose whether treatment was still in patients’ best interest. Transcripts were coded and analyzed using a qualitative deductive approach. Results: Team-family conflicts occurred in 29 out of 101 conversations (29%) concerning 20 out of 36 patients (56%). Conflicts mostly concerned more than one topic. We identified four complicating context- and/or family-related factors: diagnostic and prognostic uncertainty, families’ strong negative emotions, limited health literacy, and burden of responsibility. Doctors used four overarching strategies to manage conflicts, namely content-oriented, process-oriented, moral and empathic strategies. Doctors mostly used content-oriented strategies, independent of the intensive care setting. They were able to effectively address conflicts in most conversations. Yet, if they did not acknowledge families’ cues indicating the existence of one or more complicating factors, conflicts were likely to linger on during the conversation. Conclusion: This study underlines the importance of doctors tailoring their communication strategies to the concrete conflict topic(s) and to the context- and family-related factors which complicate a specific conflict.

Details

ISSN :
14321238 and 03424642
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Intensive Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b4e008fb4074db052e43370b25d8a999