“恢复健康,为自己做出正确的决定”——临床医生与严重精神疾病患者及其替代决策者一起工作的经验和观点。

IF 2.5 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Samuel Law, Vicky Stergiopoulos, Juveria Zaheer, Arash Nakhost
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在目前世界上大多数地区的临床精神病学实践中,治疗决定是基于一个人做出这些决定的能力。当一个人缺乏理解和欣赏治疗决定的能力时,在许多司法管辖区,为了促进安全性和最佳临床结果,会指定第三方替代决策者(SDM)代表他或她。例如,在加拿大安大略省,家庭成员(通常)或公共监护人被任命为精神科监护人,他们构成精神科护理医疗法律体系的一个组成部分。在这种情况下,与患者和他们的sdm一起工作的临床医生遇到了独特的挑战,并以专门的方式提供护理,尽管很少有研究关注他们的经验和反思。基于焦点小组数据,本定性研究采用描述性和解释性现象学方法,通过主题分析,从加拿大多伦多一家城市教学医院精神科住院和门诊的临床医生那里检查这些方面。临床医生(1)认识到SDM和患者生活中的困难和挑战,包括双方具有挑战性的情绪和经历,以及成为SDM的风险和关系变化;(2)了解患者的情况,尊重患者的自主和意愿——在患者能力波动的情况下,他们是自主的推动者,关心患者的先前意愿,促进沟通,让患者了解情况,促进从SDM向自决的过渡;(3)与家庭sdm有特殊的工作关系,包括支持sdm,避免延迟或拒绝治疗的伤害,在保持专业界限的同时与sdm进行教育和合作;(4)有时发现很难与SDM合作,这源于与过度参与或不感兴趣的家庭SDM合作,应对感知到的糟糕SDM决策,他们有时会思考SDM是否必要;(5)描述家庭和公共监护人和受托人(PGT) SDMs之间的差异——他们认为PGT与医疗决策者密切相关,而家庭SDMs则更密切地参与其中,更有可能不同意医生的建议;(6)认识到SDM在各种情况下的重要性——通过看到SDM的社会价值,并认识到SDMs有助于他们在保护患者的过程中对自己的行为感觉更好;(7)就如何在公共、社会和家庭SDM层面上改进现行制度表达意见。我们得出结论,临床医生具有独特的调解作用,在理解患者和SDM面临的不同角色和挑战方面具有特权和责任,并且有机会改善患者和SDM的体验,临床结果,开展教育并倡导道德公正的决策。这些临床角色也会带来挫折、不适、道德上的痛苦,有时还会带来间接的创伤。临床医生对患者护理这一复杂而微妙的交叉点的独特理解,提供了对自主权、护理和保护责任、倡导和情感动态等核心问题的洞察,因为《残疾人权利公约》(CRPD)所倡导的废除sdm的更大的哲学和社会运动正在发生。我们简要地讨论作为备选方案的支持决策的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"Get Well Enough to Make the Right Decision for Themselves"-Experiences and Perspectives of Clinicians Working with People with Serious Mental Illness and Their Substitute Decision Makers.

In the current clinical psychiatric practice in most of the world, treatment decisions are based on a person's capacity to make these decisions. When a person lacks the capacity to understand and appreciate treatment decisions, in many jurisdictions a third-party substitute decision maker (SDM) is appointed on his or her behalf in order to promote safety and optimal clinical outcome. In Ontario, Canada, for example, family members (typically) or public guardians are appointed as SDMs, and they form an integral part of the medical-legal system in psychiatric care. Clinicians working with both patients and their SDMs in these circumstances encounter unique challenges and deliver care in specialized ways, though little research has focused on their experiences and reflections. Based on focus group data, this qualitative study uses a descriptive and interpretative phenomenological approach through thematic analysis to examine these aspects from clinicians working in both inpatient and outpatient settings of an urban teaching hospital's psychiatric services in Toronto, Canada. Seven key themes emerged: Clinicians (1) appreciate hardships and challenges in lives of SDMs and patients-including the challenging emotions and experiences on both sides, and the risks and relational changes from being an SDM; (2) have an understanding of the patient's situation and respect for patient autonomy and wishes-they are promoter of autonomy and mindful of patients' prior wishes amidst patients' fluctuating capacity, facilitating communication, keeping patients informed and promoting transitioning from SDM to self-determination; (3) have a special working relationship with family SDMs-including supporting SDMs, avoiding harm from delayed or denied treatment, and educating and collaborating with SDMs while maintaining professional boundaries; (4) at times find it difficult working with SDMs-stemming from working with over-involved or uninterested family SDMs, coping with perceived poor SDM decisions, and they sometimes ponder if SDMs are necessary; (5) delineate differences between family and Public Guardian and Trustee (PGT) SDMs-they see PGT as closely aligned with medical decision makers, while family SDMs are more intimately involved and more likely to disagree with a physician's recommendation; (6) recognize the importance of the SDM role in various contexts-through seeing social values in having SDMs, and acknowledging that having SDMS help them to feel better about their actions as they work to protect the patients; and (7) express ideas on how to improve the current system-at public, societal, and family SDM levels. We conclude that clinicians have unique mediating roles, with privilege and responsibility in understanding the different roles and challenges patients and SDMs face, and have opportunities to improve patient and SDM experiences, clinical outcomes, carry out education, and advocate for ethically just decisions. These clinical roles also come with frustration, discomfort, moral distress and at times vicarious trauma. Clinicians' unique understanding of this complex and nuanced intersection of patient care provides insight into the core issues of autonomy, duty to care and protect, advocacy, and emotional dynamics involved in this sector as a larger philosophical and social movement to abolish SDMs, as advocated by the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability (CRPD), is taking place. We briefly discuss the role of supported decision making as an alternative as.

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来源期刊
Behavioral Sciences
Behavioral Sciences Social Sciences-Development
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
429
审稿时长
11 weeks
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