The Validity of Advance Directives in Acute Situations.

BACKGROUND Nearly every fourth person in Germany has an advance directive that is to be used in certain medical situations. It is questionable, however, whether advance directives truly influence important treatment decisions in the intensive care unit. We studied the extent to which doctors and patients' relatives agree on the applicability of advance directives in the acute setting. METHODS A prospective study was carried out by questionnaire among the physicians and relatives of 50 patients with advance directives who were hospitalized on four different multidisciplinary intensive care units. The answers of 25 residents in training, 14 senior physicians, and 19 relatives were analyzed both quantitatively and qualitatively. The extent of agreement was assessed by means of Gwet's AC1 with linear weighting. RESULTS In most of the advance directives, the conditions under which they were meant to apply were stated in broad, general terms in prewritten blocks of text. 23 of the 50 patients (46%) died. All relatives stated that they were very familiar with the patients' wishes; 18 of 19 were legally responsible for decision-making. In assessing whether the advance directive was applicable to the situation at hand, the strength of agreement between physicians and relatives as well as between the two groups of physicians was only fair and non-significant (0.35; 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.01 to 0.71; p = 0.059 and 0.24; 95% CI: -0.03 to 0.50; p = 0.079). The relatives found the advance directives more useful than the doctors did (median, 5 vs. 3 [p = 0.018] on a Likert scale ranging from 0 [not useful at all] to 5 [very useful]) and favored their literal application (median, 5 vs. 4 [p = 0.018] on a Likert scale ranging from 0 [favoring the doctor's interpretation] to 5 [favoring literal application]). 30 days after the decision, 13 relatives (68%) felt that the patient's wishes had been fully complied with. CONCLUSION These groups' clearly differing assessments of the applicability of advance directives imply that the currently most common types of advance directive are not suitable for use in intensive care. In order to support patients' relatives in their role as surrogate participants in decision-making, improved advance directives should be developed, and their implementation should be incorporated into the training and continuing medical education of intensive-care physicians.

[1]  C. May,et al.  Barriers to Advance Care Planning at the End of Life: An Explanatory Systematic Review of Implementation Studies , 2015, PloS one.

[2]  A. van der Heide,et al.  The effects of advance care planning on end-of-life care: A systematic review , 2014, Palliative medicine.

[3]  K. Wegscheider,et al.  Implementing an advance care planning program in German nursing homes: results of an inter-regionally controlled intervention trial. , 2014, Deutsches Arzteblatt international.

[4]  M. Garrouste-Orgeas,et al.  The ETHICA study (part I): elderly’s thoughts about intensive care unit admission for life-sustaining treatments , 2013, Intensive Care Medicine.

[5]  M. Garrouste-Orgeas,et al.  The ETHICA study (part II): simulation study of determinants and variability of ICU physician decisions in patients aged 80 or over , 2013, Intensive Care Medicine.

[6]  U. Janssens,et al.  Therapiezieländerung und Therapiebegrenzung in der Intensivmedizin , 2013, Der Anaesthesist.

[7]  C. Wiese,et al.  [Palliative care oriented therapy for all patients : recommendations of an expert circle]. , 2012, Der Anaesthesist.

[8]  O. Bienvenu,et al.  Family response to critical illness: Postintensive care syndrome–family , 2012, Critical care medicine.

[9]  Neitzke Therapiezieländerung und Therapiebegrenzung in der Intensivmedizin , 2012, Medizinische Klinik - Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin.

[10]  S. Chawla,et al.  Advance directives in an oncologic intensive care unit: a contemporary analysis of their frequency, type, and impact. , 2011, Journal of palliative medicine.

[11]  G. Borasio Das Patientenverfügungsgesetz und die medizinische Praxis , 2011 .

[12]  M. Gillick Reversing the code status of advance directives? , 2010, The New England journal of medicine.

[13]  K. Langa,et al.  Advance directives and outcomes of surrogate decision making before death. , 2010, The New England journal of medicine.

[14]  K. Gwet Computing inter-rater reliability and its variance in the presence of high agreement. , 2008, The British journal of mathematical and statistical psychology.

[15]  A. Tietze,et al.  [Attitudes on euthanasia and medical advance directives]. , 2005, Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift.

[16]  R. Barbour,et al.  Adherence to advance directives in critical care decision making: vignette study , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[17]  Charles G. Martin,et al.  Influence of an advance directive on the initiation of life support technology in critically ill cancer patients , 2001, Critical care medicine.

[18]  J. R. Landis,et al.  The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data. , 1977, Biometrics.