Physician Moral Distress and End-of-Life Physician-Parent Communication and Care

L. B. Bateman
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Abstract

Objective: By exploring perspectives of pediatric specialists on end-of-life (EOL) communication and care through narrative interviews, we aim to examine the extent to which interactions about death lead to feelings of moral distress. Methods: 17 pediatric emergency medicine and pediatric critical care physicians practicing in a 380-bed academic children’s medical center in the southeast went through 2 rounds of narrative interviews. The overarching interview question in Phase I was: “How has your background influenced the way you communicate with and care for dying children and their families?” The data generated from the interviews in Phase I led to additional questions and topics for exploration in Phase II. Grounded theory informed the design of this study and analysis of the data. Results: Although most participants felt that EOL decisions were the families’ jurisdiction, the physicians described experiencing moral distress in some cases, especially when they felt they were forced to put the parents’ prerogatives over the child-patients’ best interests. Moral distress ensued from observing other physicians withdrawing life-sustaining care too soon, from parents prolonging care contrary to what these physicians thought were the child best interests, and issues surrounding resuscitation and organ donation. Conclusion: Research indicates that physician burnout is more prevalent among those physicians in palliative care who feel inadequately trained in communication skills. In addition to promoting better patient care, more education and training in communication and EOL issues may prevent physician moral distress which can decrease physician burnout and ensure more efficacious humane patient care.
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医师道德困境与临终医师父母沟通与关怀
目的:通过叙述性访谈,探讨儿科专家对临终沟通和护理的看法,我们旨在检验关于死亡的互动在多大程度上导致道德痛苦感。方法:对在东南部一家拥有380张床位的儿童医学中心执业的17名儿科急诊医学和儿科重症监护医生进行两轮叙述性访谈。第一阶段的首要采访问题是:“你的背景如何影响你与垂死儿童及其家人沟通和照顾的方式?”第一阶段采访产生的数据为第二阶段的探索带来了更多的问题和主题。基础理论为本研究的设计和数据分析提供了依据。结果:尽管大多数参与者认为EOL的决定是家庭的管辖权,但医生描述了在某些情况下经历的道德痛苦,尤其是当他们觉得被迫将父母的特权置于儿童患者的最大利益之上时。观察到其他医生过早地撤回维持生命的护理,父母违背这些医生认为的儿童最大利益延长护理,以及围绕复苏和器官捐赠的问题,道德上的痛苦随之而来。结论:研究表明,在那些感觉沟通技能培训不足的姑息治疗医生中,医生倦怠更为普遍。除了促进更好的患者护理外,在沟通和EOL问题上进行更多的教育和培训可以防止医生的道德痛苦,这可以减少医生的倦怠感,并确保更有效的人性化患者护理。
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