Publication | Open Access
How do doctors discuss do-not-resuscitate orders?
19
Citations
6
References
1985
Year
Trauma ResuscitationClinical Decision-makingResuscitation TrainingPrehospital ResuscitationMedical Decision MakingCritical Care MedicinePrimary CareCardiopulmonary ResuscitationDnr OrdersDo-not-resuscitate OrdersOutcomes ResearchImportant TopicPatient PreferencesHealthcare Professional BehaviorPalliative CareMedical EthicsInformed ConsentPatient SafetyPatient-centered OutcomeMedicineCritical Emergency MedicineEmergency Medicine
Although patient preferences are important in decisions about "do not resuscitate" (DNR) orders, little is known about how physicians discuss these orders with patients. We asked 15 physicians to simulate discussing such orders with a patient. We found a striking variation in whether physicians explicitly asked for patient preferences, how they described cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and its possible outcomes and whether they made a recommendation to the patient about DNR orders. There was no pattern to the different amounts of information presented about CPR. Physicians gave conflicting reasons for how they individualized discussions with patients. Awareness of such different behaviors may stimulate physicians to examine what they say to patients about this sensitive and important topic and why they say it.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1