围绕转诊和重症监护入院制定干预措施:一项混合方法研究

C. Bassford, F. Griffiths, M. Svantesson, M. Ryan, N. Krucien, J. Dale, S. Rees, K. Rees, A. Ignatowicz, H. Parsons, N. Flowers, Z. Fritz, G. Perkins, Sarah Quinton, Sarah Symons, C. White, Huayi Huang, J. Turner, M. Brooke, Aimee McCreedy, C. Blake, A. Slowther
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引用次数: 11

摘要

重症监护治疗可以挽救生命,但它对接受治疗的患者来说是侵入性的和痛苦的,而且并不总是成功的。决定患者是否会从重症监护中受益是一项艰巨的临床和伦理挑战。探索转诊和入住重症监护室的决策过程,并制定和测试改进干预措施。一项混合方法研究,包括(1)两项系统综述,调查与入住重症监护病房的决定相关的因素以及临床医生、患者和家属的经历;(2) 观察英国中部地区六个NHS信托机构的重症监护室医生、转诊医生、患者和家属的决定和访谈;(3) 向英国重症监护室顾问和重症监护外展护士分发的选择实验调查,了解他们对重症监护室入院决策中使用的因素的偏好;(4) 根据以前的工作流程制定决策支持干预措施,包括决策和支持转诊的道德框架和决策支持表格以及患者和家庭信息传单。在三个NHS信托中测试了实施可行性;(5) 开发和测试一种工具,根据对患者记录的评估,评估重症监护室入院相关决策的道德质量。该工具在120份患者记录中进行了评分者间和站点间可靠性测试。系统综述和人种学研究中确定的对决策的影响包括年龄、是否患有慢性病、功能状态、是否有不尝试心肺复苏命令、转诊专业、转诊者资历和重症监护室床位可用性。重症监护室的医生在做决定时使用格式塔评估病人。选择实验表明,年龄是咨询师和重症监护外展护士入院偏好的最重要因素。民族志研究阐明了决策过程的复杂性,以及团队之间以及与患者和家人之间建立跨专业关系和良好沟通的重要性。医生们发现很难阐明和平衡重症监护室治疗对患者的益处和负担。决策支持干预的接受率很低,尽管使用它的医生指出,它改善了决策原因的表达和与患者的沟通。每个组成部分研究都存在局限性;例如,我们在定性工作中很难招募患者和家属。然而,该项目受益于一种混合方法,该方法减轻了组成部分研究的潜在局限性。关于转诊和入住重症监护室的决策是复杂的。这项研究提供了证据和资源,帮助临床医生和组织改善决策,并最终改善危重患者的护理。需要对决策实践进行进一步研究,特别是在决策过程中如何最好地与患者和家属接触。参与这些决策的临床医生的培训开发和评估应该是未来工作的优先事项。本研究的系统综述注册为PROSPERO CRD42016039054、CRD42015019711和CRD420150197 14。国家卫生研究所卫生服务和交付研究计划。阿伯丁大学和苏格兰政府卫生和社会保健局首席科学家办公室为卫生经济学研究单位提供资金。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Developing an intervention around referral and admissions to intensive care: a mixed-methods study
Intensive care treatment can be life-saving, but it is invasive and distressing for patients receiving it and it is not always successful. Deciding whether or not a patient will benefit from intensive care is a difficult clinical and ethical challenge.To explore the decision-making process for referral and admission to the intensive care unit and to develop and test an intervention to improve it.A mixed-methods study comprising (1) two systematic reviews investigating the factors associated with decisions to admit patients to the intensive care unit and the experiences of clinicians, patients and families; (2) observation of decisions and interviews with intensive care unit doctors, referring doctors, and patients and families in six NHS trusts in the Midlands, UK; (3) a choice experiment survey distributed to UK intensive care unit consultants and critical care outreach nurses, eliciting their preferences for factors used in decision-making for intensive care unit admission; (4) development of a decision-support intervention informed by the previous work streams, including an ethical framework for decision-making and supporting referral and decision-support forms and patient and family information leaflets. Implementation feasibility was tested in three NHS trusts; (5) development and testing of a tool to evaluate the ethical quality of decision-making related to intensive care unit admission, based on the assessment of patient records. The tool was tested for inter-rater and intersite reliability in 120 patient records.Influences on decision-making identified in the systematic review and ethnographic study included age, presence of chronic illness, functional status, presence of a do not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation order, referring specialty, referrer seniority and intensive care unit bed availability. Intensive care unit doctors used a gestalt assessment of the patient when making decisions. The choice experiment showed that age was the most important factor in consultants’ and critical care outreach nurses’ preferences for admission. The ethnographic study illuminated the complexity of the decision-making process, and the importance of interprofessional relationships and good communication between teams and with patients and families. Doctors found it difficult to articulate and balance the benefits and burdens of intensive care unit treatment for a patient. There was low uptake of the decision-support intervention, although doctors who used it noted that it improved articulation of reasons for decisions and communication with patients.Limitations existed in each of the component studies; for example, we had difficulty recruiting patients and families in our qualitative work. However, the project benefited from a mixed-method approach that mitigated the potential limitations of the component studies.Decision-making surrounding referral and admission to the intensive care unit is complex. This study has provided evidence and resources to help clinicians and organisations aiming to improve the decision-making for and, ultimately, the care of critically ill patients.Further research is needed into decision-making practices, particularly in how best to engage with patients and families during the decision process. The development and evaluation of training for clinicians involved in these decisions should be a priority for future work.The systematic reviews of this study are registered as PROSPERO CRD42016039054, CRD42015019711 and CRD42015019714.The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme. The University of Aberdeen and the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government Health and Social Care Directorates fund the Health Economics Research Unit.
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