medic documentThe Case of Breaking Bad News Badly precipitated yet another thoughtful and riveting discussion over the past week. We are now proud to present to you the Curated Community Commentary and our two expert opinions. Thank-you again to all our experts and participants for contributing again this week to the ALiEM MEdIC series.

This follow-up post includes

  • The responses of our experts, Dr. Ashley Shreves and Dr. Susan Shaw (@drsusanshaw)
  • A summary of insights from the ALiEM community derived from the blog discussions
  • Freely downloadable PDF versions of the case and expert responses for use in continuing medical education activities
[su_spoiler title=”Expert Response 1: Dr. Ashley Shreves” style=”fancy” icon=”chevron”]

Many physicians have been traumatized by the experience of performing futile resuscitations on terminally ill patients, feeling that their medico-legal milieu has forced them into a position of doing physical harm to vulnerable, fragile individuals in the last moments of their lives. The fall-out has been a medical profession obsessed with the topic of code status, but with little training dedicated to communication surrounding what can be an emotionally challenging subject (1). Not surprisingly, studies have demonstrated that such conversations are too brief and lacking in key content (2). The result is that patients and families often make decisions that are inconsistent with their goals and values. Doctors are frustrated by what they perceive to be poor choices. Everyone loses. 

What does code status mean?

Patients’ decisions about code status tell doctors whether a resuscitation should be attempted, in the setting of a cardiopulmonary arrest. A DNR order should not guide any other medical care that the patient receives and yet, studies have shown that it does (3). Disturbingly, DNR status alone is strongly associated with refusal of care by the ICU team (4).

Does code status need to be addressed in the ED?

The short answer is rarely. Emergency physicians, like the one in this case, may feel that they’re doing their inpatient colleagues a favor by broaching a topic so important to other physicians. The reality is that very few of our ED patients are at risk of suffering a full cardiopulmonary arrest in the ED or in the first 24 hours of their admission. This conversation takes time, skill and real knowledge of the patient’s underlying condition.  As this case study demonstrates, having this conversation quickly and poorly is worse than not having it at all. 

What happens when patients with advanced illnesses “code”?

Only about 10% of patients who experience an out of hospital cardiac arrest survive (5).  In those with advanced terminal illnesses, the outcomes are much worse. In one study of patients with metastatic cancer opting to be “full code”, not a single patient survived an expected cardiac arrest (6). Those who are “successfully” resuscitated are at often high risk of having a prolonged dying experience in the ICU. 

What is most important to patients?

While doctors are often most focused on the delivery of medical interventions like CPR, patients are more concerned about the outcomes that can be achieved by undergoing such treatments. When presented with a scenario in which the outcome of illness is severe cognitive or functional impairment, 90% and 79% of patients with advanced diseases, respectively, say they would want no treatment at all (7). Understanding then, what the patient considers an acceptable quality of life is one of the essential components to any conversation about goals of care.

Roadmap for the end of life conversation

Some patients do present to the ED critically ill and decisions about the use of many life-sustaining treatments (LST) need to be made promptly. Following the roadmap below can help ensure that patients and families make decisions that best reflect their goals and values, rather than poor doctor communication.

  • Do your homework. Before you approach patients about the use of LST, make sure you have a good sense of their underlying condition, including their prognosis with and without LST. 
  • Learn a little about the patient. This helps refocus physicians on the person behind the patient and helps establish trust with families. “Can you tell me a little bit about your husband?” 
  • Find out what the patient/family understands about their condition. Patients who don’t believe or understand that they have a terminal disease will be confused when asked about code status. “What have the doctors told you about your illness?” It can become clear in this step that patients and families are in significant denial about the terminal nature of their illness. That is usually a red flag suggesting that establishing goals of care will be complex and require significant time, beyond that available in the ED. Move on!
  • Give patients/families your best summary of the medical facts. Keep this piece focused on the big picture and minimize jargon. If you think the patient is dying, say “I’m worried that he is dying.” Be honest about the limitations of our medical technology and science. “His cancer is so advanced that I don’t have any more treatments that will make him better.” Let the patient/family know if you think that death could come soon. “I’m worried that time may be short.” 
  • Ask about what the patient is hoping for, given this new information. “What is most important to you, knowing that time is short? How do you want to live your life with the time that you have?” For the family, “What would your husband tell us is most important to him, if he knew his doctors thought he was dying?”
  • Assimilate all the above pieces of information to formulate a recommendation for the patient/family (8). DO NOT ask what treatments patients/families want. This presumes a level of health literacy that few lay people have. Instead, based on the above conversation, the best path forward should become relatively clear. “Based on what I’m hearing from you and what we know about his advanced disease, I think it makes the most sense now to refocus on his comfort and quality of life for the time that he has.” 
  • Once the foundation above has been laid, addressing the use of specific LST like intubation and CPR is typically a 30 second discussion. Literally. “I don’t recommend placing him on a breathing machine (or life support) or using other invasive treatments like this as it will only prolong his dying process.” “Along those lines, when his heart stops, I think we should allow him to have a natural death” (9). “If that’s ok with you, I’ll let the other members of the team know that you’ve made this decision by placing a DNR order.”    

Patients and families have not been asked if they “want everything done.” They haven’t even been asked if they want chest compressions or to be shocked.  The patient and family have been engaged in a discussion that allowed them to share their priorities, values and goals and the physician, the person in the room with the highest health literacy, has made a recommendation to them about the best medical path forward, based on that information.   

References

  1. Siddiqui MF, Holley JL. Residents’ practices and perceptions about do not resuscitate orders and pronouncing death: an opportunity for clinical training. Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2011;28(2):94-7.
  2. Anderson WG, Chase R, Pantilat SZ, Tulsky JA, Auerbach AD. Code status discussions between attending hospitalist physicians and medical patients at hospital admission. J Gen Intern Med. 2011;26(4):359-66.
  3. Beach MC, Morrison RS. The effect of do-not-resuscitate orders on physician decision-making. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2002;50(12):2057-61.
  4. Cohen RI, Lisker GN, Eichorn A, Multz AS, Silver A. The impact of do-not-resuscitate order on triage decisions to a medical intensive care unit. J Crit Care. 2009;24(2):311-5.
  5. Go AS, Mozaffarian D, Roger VL, Benjamin EJ, Berry JD, Borden WB, et al. Heart disease and stroke statistics–2013 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2013;127(1):e6-e245.
  6. Ewer MS, Kish SK, Martin CG, Price KJ, Feeley TW. Characteristics of cardiac arrest in cancer patients as a predictor of survival after cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Cancer. 2001;92(7):1905-12.
  7. Fried TR, Bradley EH, Towle VR, Allore H. Understanding the treatment preferences of seriously ill patients. N Engl J Med. 2002;346(14):1061-6.
  8. Blinderman CD, Krakauer EL, Solomon MZ. Time to revise the approach to determining cardiopulmonary resuscitation status. JAMA. 2012;307(9):917-8.
  9. Barnato AE, Arnold RM. The effect of emotion and physician communication behaviors on surrogates’ life-sustaining treatment decisions: a randomized simulation experiment. Crit Care Med. 2013;41(7):1686-91.
[/su_spoiler] [su_spoiler title=”Expert Response 2: Dr. Susan Shaw” style=”fancy” icon=”chevron”]

William isn’t alone in his experience described in the case study. As a critical care doctor, I meet many patients and families who have been asked versions of the question, “Do you want us to do everything?” While well intended, this is a very poorly worded question. Most patients or their families will answer a resounding “yes” as, for the most part, they do want you to do everything possible that makes sense to them, based on their personal values, goals, and clinical situation, AND based on your clinical expertise. The challenge facing physicians, patients and families is the need to have what can be a difficult conversation that explores both what makes sense to you and to the patient.

Conversations about end of life care including “code status” should ideally occur as a series of conversations between a patient and his or her main doctor or healthcare provider. The patient’s family ideally would be a part of these conversations (if deemed appropriate by the patient) so that the family can best speak on his or her behalf should the patient become unable to do so.  An advanced care directive, or living will, if well written, can also be an effective way to let a family or future care providers be aware of a patient’s preferences for care. 

Hospital-based doctors frequently find themselves in a difficult position. Important conversations must occur and treatment plans must often be created with seemingly little opportunity to develop a strong relationship with a patient and his or her family. We can be better prepared for such conversations if we know what is valued by seriously ill patients and their families: trust, open communication, and to not be kept alive by life support when there is no or little hope for recovery. 

We can also be better prepared by training ourselves and our students to take a more human approach to such conversations. Our shared goal is to better understand what is happening, what is likely and what the patient wants to achieve from his or her treatment. We will be more likely to reach this goal if we take some simple steps to have a more meaningful (and useful) conversation than just asking “Do you want us to do everything?” 

Try to create a space to talk by either drawing the curtains or moving, if possible, to a quieter place. Sit down and make eye contact. Make sure the patient or his/her family (or designated substitute decision maker) understands who you are and what role you play in the patient’s care. Try to learn something about who the patient as a person. Ask questions such as: What is important to him or her? How does he/she spend his/her time? and What gives his or her life meaning?

Focus your conversation on goals rather than the technical aspects of care. Qualitative studies demonstrate doctors focus on a checklist of interventions, more readily finding words to describe CPR, defibrillation, intubation and mechanical ventilation. But patients tell us they want to better understand what can or will be accomplished, how likely success (as defined by the patient) will be, and what recommendations the doctor would make.

The last thing William should do is avoid his patient and the patient’s wife. He should work with the attending emergency physician to plan a second conversation. I would map out a plan with William and then the two of us would re-approach Mr Smith and his wife. One might say:

I’m sorry I upset you. I chose my words poorly. I want to make sure that we both understand what your goals are for your care and life you have ahead of you. I want you to understand what my concerns are, and I would like to share my thoughts with you on how best we can work together to achieve your goals. I understand that you are in a lot of pain right now from the spread of your cancer. We can work together to improve your pain control. I do want to make sure that I, along with the rest of your medical team, understand what treatments or medical interventions are most appropriate for you.

Then listen.

A spectrum exists in medical decision-making between paternalism, shared decision making, and informed choice. Paternalism places all the decision-making in the hands of the physician while informed choice places patients and families in what is now recognized to be an unfair and unsupported position of being asked to make important and sometimes irreversible decisions without having sufficient information or context to truly be able to make a “best choice.” Shared decision making is much more bidirectional: the physician provides medical information, the patient contributes information about personal goals, values, preferences. This is the approach I aim to take when discussing our treatment plan

We can better equip ourselves by seeking out wisdom and expertise from our colleagues and published experts.  Residents and medical students should join as many family meetings as possible to both observe different styles and try out different approaches.  I have been at this for almost 20 years and I am continuously finding new phrases and approaches that either work or don’t.  Life is a continuous experiment in how to improve!

Many family doctors, internists, and surgeons have already had such conversations with their patients but in an emergency, we often don’t have the time to seek out their knowledge. However, when even small amounts of time are available I know I’ve learned much about how best to provide care to some of my patients by calling the family physician, respirologist, neurologist, or surgeon who has known the person in front of me for years, often through crisis and recovery.

References

  1. Siddiqui MF, Holley JL. Residents’ practices and perceptions about do not resuscitate orders and pronouncing death: an opportunity for clinical training. Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2011;28(2):94-7.
  2. Anderson WG, Chase R, Pantilat SZ, Tulsky JA, Auerbach AD. Code status discussions between attending hospitalist physicians and medical patients at hospital admission. J Gen Intern Med. 2011;26(4):359-66.
  3. Beach MC, Morrison RS. The effect of do-not-resuscitate orders on physician decision-making. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2002;50(12):2057-61.
  4. Cohen RI, Lisker GN, Eichorn A, Multz AS, Silver A. The impact of do-not-resuscitate order on triage decisions to a medical intensive care unit. J Crit Care. 2009;24(2):311-5.
  5. Go AS, Mozaffarian D, Roger VL, Benjamin EJ, Berry JD, Borden WB, et al. Heart disease and stroke statistics–2013 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2013;127(1):e6-e245.
  6. Ewer MS, Kish SK, Martin CG, Price KJ, Feeley TW. Characteristics of cardiac arrest in cancer patients as a predictor of survival after cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Cancer. 2001;92(7):1905-12.
  7. Fried TR, Bradley EH, Towle VR, Allore H. Understanding the treatment preferences of seriously ill patients. N Engl J Med. 2002;346(14):1061-6.
  8. Blinderman CD, Krakauer EL, Solomon MZ. Time to revise the approach to determining cardiopulmonary resuscitation status. JAMA. 2012;307(9):917-8.
  9. Barnato AE, Arnold RM. The effect of emotion and physician communication behaviors on surrogates’ life-sustaining treatment decisions: a randomized simulation experiment. Crit Care Med. 2013;41(7):1686-91.
[/su_spoiler] [su_spoiler title=”Community Commentary: Dr. Sarah Luckett-Gatopoulos” style=”fancy” icon=”chevron”]

Thank you to our participants

Twitter

Alvin Chin (@AylC1989), Tamara McColl (@mccoll_tamara), Lindsay Melvin (@LMelvinMD), John Neary (@jddneary), Simon Oczkowski (@Simon_Ocz), Julian Owen (@JulianOwenEM), Kaif Pardhan (@twoscoopskp), Ben Tam (@BenTam)

Blog

Colin Bell, Michael Beyak, Kyla Caners, Teresa Chan, Alvin Chin, Tamara McColl, Lindsay Melvin, Eve Purdy, Sameed Shaikh

This case generated thoughtful discussion about the way we approach goals of care conversations with patients in the emergency department. While there was no consensus regarding where or how goals of care discussions should take place, some common themes arose.

Understanding goals of care is much more than getting a ‘code status’

In the present case, William, a medical student, felt he should get the code status sheet filled out to help the admitting team. Medical student Eve Purdy reported getting ‘unhappy looks’ from residents when she had not ‘gotten a code status’ while admitting patients as a clinical clerk. Residents Lindsay Melvin and Tamara McColl acknowledge that there is a culture in many hospitals that prioritises quickly establishing a ‘code status’, a task that often falls to junior learners in the emergency department.

Despite the pressure to quickly ‘get a code status’ in the emergency department, there was unanimous agreement that understanding goals of care requires thoughtful and considered discussion, not merely filling out a checkbox or applying terms like ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ or ‘Allow Natural Death’. ICU physician Shankar Sivananthan describes an approach that requires ‘…ask[ing] about the patient/family’s understanding of their disease and prognosis’ before moving on to establishing what the patient’s wishes would be should he or she become sicker, emphasizing that the health care team wants to ‘have the patient’s wishes in mind when coming up with a treatment plan’.

We can and should initiate goals of care discussions in the emergency department

Most commenters agreed that goals of care discussions can be initiated in the emergency department, but that the urgency in establishing patient wishes depends on the clinical picture. Loice Swisher suggested that it is reasonable to ‘find out if the patient/family has any wishes already. If not and it is not emergent, I suggest that they could consider designating a medical decision maker in the family or reviewing with their doctor…in case they are involved in a sudden serious event’. Sameed Shaikh agreed that not all patients require emergent discussion of code status, and that understanding the urgency of the patient’s current clinical picture may guide when it is best to broach conversations surrounding goals of care. On Twitter, Simon Oczkowski suggested that ‘The overnight code status discussion is just to document patients who have already decided’.

In instances where patients are acutely ill or medically unstable, the consensus was that goals of care should be established early, if practical. In these instances, Dr. Shaikh acknowledges that we are ‘working against the clock’ and may need to ask questions like, ‘your family member is really sick. We are doing everything we can and I think they might do ok, but there is a very real possibility things could get worse – did they ever say what they would want? If not, what do you think they would want?’ Resident Kyla Caners echoes Dr. Shaikh, adding that ‘it’s important to express that your discussion comes from a place of genuine care, but to also express the urgency’.

There was agreement that not all goals of care discussions need to be completed in the emergency department. Tamara McColl says, ‘I always hold the emergent goals of care discussions immediately but usually defer the rest to the admitting team due to time constraints and concerns regarding patient flow’. Loice Swisher states that she ‘opens the door’ for the conversation by saying something like ‘I’m going to admit you to the hospital. When the medical team comes to write your orders they will automatically ask about medical directives including what we call code status which is when the heart stops.’ On Twitter, Ben Tam concurred that ‘complex decisions need time. Sometimes role of junior is to introduce ideas overnight, then AM followup.’ Others agreed that broaching the topic in the emergency department can allow patients and families to consider their wishes and engage in a more definitive discussion with admitting practitioners later.

A skilled and experienced provider is the best person to discuss goals of care with patients and their families

While many in this discussion acknowledged that ‘getting the code status’ is often delegated to junior members of the team, most agreed that more senior practitioners are the more appropriate choice. On Twitter, emergency physician and intensivist Julian Owen commented that the discussion may be initiated by ‘…med student + senior/MRP,’ stating that it is ‘…hard to commit to vent support/CPR [without] experience.’ Alvin C, a medical student, agrees that he ‘wouldn’t even dare approach this conversation alone with a patient’. Colin Bell advocated that, ‘frankly, the person who should begin the conversation is the person dedicated to the process, giving it the time and sensitivity it deserves.’

With that in mind, the reality is that sometimes inexperienced learners are tasked with initiating goals of care discussions, and Lindsay Melvin suggested that ‘the very best thing for [patient and families] is to have discussion [with] someone who cares, regardless of training level’.

Patients often want guidance in making goals of care decisions

On Twitter, resident Kaif Pardhan suggested that ‘most [patients] want guidance and to make final decision. Always couple at ends of spectrum: “Yes Dr” and “What do you know?”’ Krishan Yadav notes that it is reflexive for inexperienced learners to offer all options to patients, and families, but that ideally these options should be tailored to what is reasonable given the patient’s medical status and expectations: “For example, do not offer chest compressions to an end-stage cancer patient with multiple comorbidities and severe acute illness, because they will not survive a cardiac arrest and thus a ‘heroic measure’ is more likely to just simply inflict further harm on the patient. Michael Beyak reminds us that, ‘this is not the time to stop being an expert… you need to provide your best advice and then see how that matches up with the wishes and values of the patient.’

When goals of care discussions go awry

Most agreed that it is reasonable to bring in someone new and revisit the conversation from the beginning.

Listing of links and references mentioned in the discussion

[/su_spoiler]

MEdIC Series Case and Responses for Download

Download the case (307 kb PDF)

medic document

Teresa Chan, MD, MHPE
ALiEM Associate Editor
Emergency Physician, Hamilton
Associate Professor, McMaster University
Assistant Dean, Program for Faculty Development, McMaster University Ontario, Canada
Teresa Chan, MD, MHPE

@TChanMD

ERDoc. #meded #FOAMed Own views expressed. Contributor to @ALiEMteam, @WeAreCanadiEM, ICE Blog, #FeminEM. @MedEdLIFE founder. Works @McMasterU & @HamHealthSci