4.6 Article

Analysis of terminal events in 109 successive deaths in a Belgian intensive care unit

Journal

INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE
Volume 30, Issue 6, Pages 1224-1227

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00134-004-2308-3

Keywords

end-of-life decision; withholding; withdrawal; ethics; intensive care unit; critical care

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Objective. To determine the incidence of end-of-life decisions in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Design and setting. Prospective data collection and questionnaire in a 31-bed medicosurgical ICU in a university hospital. Patients and participants. All 109 ICU patients who died during a 3-month period (April-June 2001). Members of the ICU team were also invited to complete a questionnaire regarding the circumstances of each patient's death. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was performed in 21 of the patients; other mechanisms leading to death were brain death (n=19), refractory shock (n=17), and refractory hypoxemia (n=2). The decision was taken in the remaining 50 patients to withdraw (n=43) or withhold (n=7) therapy. Questionnaires were completed for 68 patients, by physician and nurse in 40 cases, physician only in 20 cases, and nurse only in 8 cases. Questionnaires were obtained for 34 of 50 patients for whom a decision was made to limit therapy. Results. Respondents generally felt that the decision was timely (n=28, 82%), 5 (15%) felt the decision was too late, and one (3%) that the decision was made too soon, before the family could be informed. Conclusions. Therapeutic limitations are frequent in patients dying in the ICU, with withdrawing more common than withholding life support. Generally members of the ICU staff were satisfied with the end-of-life decisions made.

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