Arne van den Bosch, Radboud M Marijnissen, Denise J C Hanssen, Richard C Oude Voshaar
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All quotes related to decisional capacity were coded independently by two researchers and compared in an iterative process to formulate an overarching framework on the assessment of decisional capacity. We selected 20 patients who had an advance directive and were judged to be decisionally compromised, as well as a selection of 40 EAS cases judged to be decisionally competent, half of which also had an advance directive (purposive sampling).</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Decisional capacity was present in every case report. Predefined, external criteria were rarely described explicitly, but physicians indirectly referred to the (cognitive) criteria set by Appelbaum and Grisso. Whether the thresholds for these dimensional criteria were met was influenced by six supporting factors (level of communication, psychiatric comorbidity, personality, presence of an advance directive, consistency of the request, and, finally, the patient-physician relationship) that also directly contributed to the judgment of capacity. The involved physicians and executed investigations were the two contextual factors providing a background.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Decisional capacity regarding euthanasia is a multidimensional construct, often implicitly assessed and influenced by supporting and contextual factors. The subjectivity of the final judgment poses ethical and legal issues and argues for continuous quality improvement processes.</p>","PeriodicalId":94112,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the American Geriatrics Society","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Capacity assessment for euthanasia in dementia: A qualitative study of 60 Dutch cases.\",\"authors\":\"Arne van den Bosch, Radboud M Marijnissen, Denise J C Hanssen, Richard C Oude Voshaar\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jgs.19218\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>The number of patients with dementia who are granted euthanasia or assisted suicide (EAS) increases yearly in the Netherlands. By law, patients need to be decisionally competent or have an advance directive. Assessment of decisional capacity is challenging as dementia progressively affects cognitive performance. We aimed to assess qualitatively which factors, and how, influence the judgment of decisional capacity in EAS cases with dementia.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We performed a qualitative study of 60 dementia EAS case summaries published by the Dutch regional euthanasia review committees between 2012 and 2021. Included reports were evaluated using the grounded theory approach. All quotes related to decisional capacity were coded independently by two researchers and compared in an iterative process to formulate an overarching framework on the assessment of decisional capacity. We selected 20 patients who had an advance directive and were judged to be decisionally compromised, as well as a selection of 40 EAS cases judged to be decisionally competent, half of which also had an advance directive (purposive sampling).</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Decisional capacity was present in every case report. Predefined, external criteria were rarely described explicitly, but physicians indirectly referred to the (cognitive) criteria set by Appelbaum and Grisso. Whether the thresholds for these dimensional criteria were met was influenced by six supporting factors (level of communication, psychiatric comorbidity, personality, presence of an advance directive, consistency of the request, and, finally, the patient-physician relationship) that also directly contributed to the judgment of capacity. The involved physicians and executed investigations were the two contextual factors providing a background.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Decisional capacity regarding euthanasia is a multidimensional construct, often implicitly assessed and influenced by supporting and contextual factors. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:在荷兰,获准安乐死或协助自杀(EAS)的痴呆症患者人数逐年增加。根据法律规定,患者需要具备决策能力或预先指示。由于痴呆症会逐渐影响患者的认知能力,因此评估患者的决策能力具有挑战性。我们旨在定性评估哪些因素以及如何影响对痴呆症 EAS 病例决策能力的判断:我们对荷兰地区安乐死审查委员会在 2012 年至 2021 年间发布的 60 份痴呆症安乐死案例摘要进行了定性研究。我们采用基础理论方法对纳入的报告进行了评估。所有与决定能力相关的引文均由两名研究人员独立编码,并通过反复比较,最终制定出一个评估决定能力的总体框架。我们选取了 20 名有预先指示且被判定为决策能力受损的患者,并选取了 40 个被判定为有决策能力的 EAS 病例,其中一半也有预先指示(目的性抽样):结果:每份病例报告中都存在决策能力问题。预设的外部标准很少被明确描述,但医生间接提到了阿贝尔鲍姆(Appelbaum)和格里斯索(Grisso)制定的(认知)标准。是否符合这些维度标准的阈值受到六个辅助因素的影响(沟通水平、精神疾病合并症、性格、是否有预先指示、请求的一致性,以及最后的医患关系),这些因素也直接影响了对行为能力的判断。参与调查的医生和已执行的调查是两个背景因素:关于安乐死的决定能力是一个多维度的概念,通常是隐性评估,并受到支持因素和背景因素的影响。最终判断的主观性带来了伦理和法律问题,因此需要不断改进质量。
Capacity assessment for euthanasia in dementia: A qualitative study of 60 Dutch cases.
Background: The number of patients with dementia who are granted euthanasia or assisted suicide (EAS) increases yearly in the Netherlands. By law, patients need to be decisionally competent or have an advance directive. Assessment of decisional capacity is challenging as dementia progressively affects cognitive performance. We aimed to assess qualitatively which factors, and how, influence the judgment of decisional capacity in EAS cases with dementia.
Methods: We performed a qualitative study of 60 dementia EAS case summaries published by the Dutch regional euthanasia review committees between 2012 and 2021. Included reports were evaluated using the grounded theory approach. All quotes related to decisional capacity were coded independently by two researchers and compared in an iterative process to formulate an overarching framework on the assessment of decisional capacity. We selected 20 patients who had an advance directive and were judged to be decisionally compromised, as well as a selection of 40 EAS cases judged to be decisionally competent, half of which also had an advance directive (purposive sampling).
Results: Decisional capacity was present in every case report. Predefined, external criteria were rarely described explicitly, but physicians indirectly referred to the (cognitive) criteria set by Appelbaum and Grisso. Whether the thresholds for these dimensional criteria were met was influenced by six supporting factors (level of communication, psychiatric comorbidity, personality, presence of an advance directive, consistency of the request, and, finally, the patient-physician relationship) that also directly contributed to the judgment of capacity. The involved physicians and executed investigations were the two contextual factors providing a background.
Conclusions: Decisional capacity regarding euthanasia is a multidimensional construct, often implicitly assessed and influenced by supporting and contextual factors. The subjectivity of the final judgment poses ethical and legal issues and argues for continuous quality improvement processes.