Obligated To Say "Yes": The How and Why Behind Transfer Decisions in Moribund Patients.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Alexa Stefanko, Nellie Trenga-Schein, Laura Chess, Mackenzie Cook
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: A core principle of emergency care is the rapid transport of severely injured patients to hospitals capable of providing definitive care. Although the social, financial, and emotional factors associated with transfers, and their impact on hospital crowding, may necessitate a more nuanced approach, little has been published on how physicians actually make the decision to transfer a potentially moribund patient. We, therefore, sought to better understand these factors as the next step toward optimizing transfer flow and patient care.

Methods: We conducted one-hour, semi-structured interviews with 16 emergency physicians at referring and referral centers, including eight accepting physicians at a quaternary-care center and eight transferring physicians at community hospitals. Interviews focused on decision-making regarding interhospital transfers for moribund patients, defined as those with injuries or disease processes judged likely to be non-survivable. Interviews were transcribed and analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis to identify common themes and decision-making factors.

Results: We identified four emerging themes that underpinned a decision to transfer or accept a potentially moribund trauma patient: 1) the accepting physician's perceived obligation to hospitals with fewer resources; 2) the difficulty of prognostication; 3) the imperfection and limitations of current advanced care planning documents; and 4) the impact of family and patient preferences.

Conclusion: The rationale behind initiating and accepting transfers of moribund trauma patients is multifaceted. This study is the first to our knowledge that explores physician decision-making in this domain. Physicians feel an obligation to patients, families, and other hospitals, which leads to almost universally initiating or accepting transfers even in cases with limited hope of survival. These interviews offer insight into opportunities to improve statewide trauma operations and highlight avenues for promoting transfer-decision heuristics and pre-transfer goals-of-care conversations without compromising patient care.

有义务说“是”:垂死病人的转移决定背后的方式和原因。
急诊护理的一个核心原则是将重伤患者迅速运送到能够提供最终护理的医院。虽然与转院相关的社会、经济和情感因素,以及它们对医院拥挤的影响,可能需要一种更细致的方法,但很少有关于医生实际上如何做出转院可能垂死病人的决定的文章发表。因此,我们试图更好地了解这些因素,作为优化转移流程和患者护理的下一步。方法:我们对转诊和转诊中心的16名急诊医生进行了一小时的半结构化访谈,其中包括一家四级护理中心的8名接诊医生和社区医院的8名转诊医生。访谈的重点是关于对濒死病人进行医院间转院的决策,濒死病人的定义是那些受伤或疾病过程被认为可能无法生存的病人。访谈记录和分析使用反身性主题分析,以确定共同的主题和决策因素。结果:我们确定了四个新出现的主题,这些主题是决定转移或接受可能垂死的创伤患者的基础:1)接受医生对资源较少的医院的感知义务;2)预测困难;3)现有高级护理计划文件的不完善和局限性;4)家庭和患者偏好的影响。结论:发起和接受濒死创伤患者转移的理由是多方面的。据我们所知,这项研究首次探讨了医生在这一领域的决策。医生感到对病人、家属和其他医院负有责任,这导致即使在生存希望有限的病例中,也几乎普遍发起或接受转院。这些访谈为改善全州创伤手术提供了机会,并强调了在不影响患者护理的情况下促进转移决策启发式和转移前护理目标对话的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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