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

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Abstract

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. © Springer-Verlag 2004.

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Gajewska, K., Schroeder, M., De Marre, F., & Vincent, J. L. (2004). Analysis of terminal events in 109 successive deaths in a Belgian intensive care unit. Intensive Care Medicine, 30(6), 1224–1227. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-004-2308-3

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