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1.
J Clin Ethics ; 33(2): 101-111, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35731814

ABSTRACT

For those with advanced life-limiting illness, the optimization of quality of life and avoidance of nonbeneficial treatments at the end of life are key ethical concerns. This article evaluates the efficacy of an Interdisciplinary Ethics Panel (IEP) approach to decision making at the end of life for unbefriended nursing home residents who lack decisional capacity and have advanced life-limiting illness, through the use of a nine-step algorithm developed for this purpose. We reviewed the outcomes of three quality-of-care phased initiatives conducted in our facility, a large public nursing home in New York City, between June 2016 and February 2020, which indicated that this IEP approach promoted advance-care planning, as palliative measures were endorsed to optimize quality of life for this vulnerable population at the end of life. We also examined another quality-of-care initiative when this IEP approach was applied to end-of-life decision making for nursing home residents who had a surrogate during the COVID-19 pandemic. This application appeared to be beneficial in adding more residents to our Palliative Care Program while it improved rates of advance-care planning. When all of the above findings are considered, we believe this novel IEP approach and algorithm have the potential to be applied elsewhere after appropriate assessment.


Subject(s)
Advance Care Planning , COVID-19 , Terminal Care , Death , Decision Making , Humans , Nursing Homes , Pandemics , Quality of Life
2.
Am J Bioeth ; 21(5): 13-15, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33945421
3.
Am J Transplant ; 20(2): 382-388, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31550420

ABSTRACT

Implementing uncontrolled donation after circulatory determination of death (uDCDD) in the United States could markedly improve supply of donor lungs for patients in need of transplants. Evidence from US pilot programs suggests families support uDCDD, but only if they are asked permission for using invasive organ preservation procedures prior to initiation. However, non-invasive strategies that confine oxygenation to lungs may be applicable to the overwhelming majority of potential uDCDD donors that have airway devices in place as part of standard resuscitation. We propose an ethical framework for lung uDCDD by: (a) initiating post mortem preservation without requiring prior permission to protect the opportunity for donation until an authorized party can be found; (b) using non-invasive strategies that confine oxygenation to lungs; and (c) maintaining strict separation between the healthcare team and the organ preservation team. Attempting uDCDD in this way has great potential to obtain more transplantable lungs while respecting donor autonomy and family wishes, securing public support, and enabling authorized persons to affirm or cease preservation decisions without requiring evidence of prior organ donation intent. It ensures prioritization of life-saving, the opportunity to allow willing donors to donate, and respect for bodily integrity while adhering to current ethical norms.


Subject(s)
Donor Selection/ethics , Informed Consent/ethics , Organ Preservation/ethics , Tissue Donors/ethics , Death , Donor Selection/methods , Donor Selection/organization & administration , Humans , Organ Preservation/methods , Professional-Family Relations , Tissue Donors/supply & distribution , United States
4.
J Clin Ethics ; 29(1): 52-61, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29565797

ABSTRACT

Evolving practice requires peer review of clinical ethics (CE) consultation for quality assessment and improvement. Many institutions have identified the chart note as the basis for this process, but to our knowledge, electronic health record (EHR) systems are not necessarily designed to easily include CE consultation notes. This article provides a framework for the inclusion of CE consultation notes into the formal EHR, describing a developed system in the Epic EHR that allows for the elaborated electronic notation of the CE chart note. The implementation of the "meaningful use" criteria for EHR, mandated by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009, requires that health professionals meet certain standards for quality, efficiency, and safety, all of which overlap with the goals of standardization, peer review, and quality improvement within CE consultation.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records , Ethics Consultation , Meaningful Use , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Humans , Quality Improvement , United States
5.
Psychiatr Q ; 88(3): 459-472, 2017 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27553865

ABSTRACT

Despite the critical importance of patient-physician trust, it may be compromised among vulnerable patients, such as (1) incarcerated patients and (2) those patients who have been victims of trauma. The purpose of this study was to examine patient-physician trust among forensic and civilian psychiatric inpatient populations and to explore whether it varied based on a patient's history of incarceration and/or victimization. A trust survey (WFPTS) and a trauma instrument (LEC-5) were administered to 93 patients hospitalized on forensic and civilian psychiatric hospital units in a large, urban public hospital. Results showed no difference in patient-physician trust between incarcerated and civilian patients. Similarly, there was no effect of a history of physical assault or sexual assault on ratings of patient-physician trust. However, the hospitalized civilian and forensic patients who reported being the victim of weapons assault had significantly lower patient-physician trust scores than their counterparts.


Subject(s)
Crime Victims/psychology , Inpatients/psychology , Physician-Patient Relations , Prisoners/psychology , Psychological Trauma/psychology , Trust/psychology , Violence/psychology , Adult , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
6.
Am J Bioeth ; 16(3): 15-24, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26913652

ABSTRACT

Although clinical ethics consultation is a high-stakes endeavor with an increasing prominence in health care systems, progress in developing standards for quality is challenging. In this article, we describe the results of a pilot project utilizing portfolios as an evaluation tool. We found that this approach is feasible and resulted in a reasonably wide distribution of scores among the 23 submitted portfolios that we evaluated. We discuss limitations and implications of these results, and suggest that this is a significant step on the pathway to an eventual certification process for clinical ethics consultants.


Subject(s)
Certification , Ethicists/standards , Ethics Consultation/standards , Professional Competence/standards , Quality of Health Care , Certification/standards , Certification/trends , Ethics, Medical , Humans , Pilot Projects , Quality of Health Care/standards , United States
7.
Ann Emerg Med ; 67(4): 531-537.e39, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26626335

ABSTRACT

STUDY OBJECTIVE: In 2006, the Institute of Medicine emphasized substantial potential to expand organ donation opportunities through uncontrolled donation after circulatory determination of death (uDCDD). We pilot an out-of-hospital uDCDD kidney program for New York City in partnership with communities that it was intended to benefit. We evaluate protocol process and outcomes while identifying barriers to success and means for improvement. METHODS: We conducted a prospective, participatory action research study in Manhattan from December 2010 to May 2011. Daily from 4 to 12 pm, our organ preservation unit monitored emergency medical services (EMS) frequencies for cardiac arrests occurring in private locations. After EMS providers independently ordered termination of resuscitation, organ preservation unit staff determined clinical eligibility and donor status. Authorized parties, persons authorized to make organ donation decisions, were approached about in vivo preservation. The study population included organ preservation unit staff, authorized parties, passersby, and other New York City agency personnel. Organ preservation unit staff independently documented shift activities with daily operations notes and teleconference summaries that we analyzed with mixed qualitative and quantitative methods. RESULTS: The organ preservation unit entered 9 private locations; all the deceased lacked previous registration, although 4 met clinical screening eligibility. No kidneys were recovered. We collected 837 notes from 35 organ preservation unit staff. Despite frequently recounting protocol breaches, most responses from passersby including New York City agencies were favorable. No authorized parties were offended by preservation requests, yielding a Bayesian posterior median 98% (95% credible interval 76% to 100%). CONCLUSION: In summary, the New York City out-of-hospital uDCDD program was not feasible. There were frequent protocol breaches and confusion in determining clinical eligibility. In the small sample of authorized persons we encountered during the immediate grieving period, negative reactions were infrequent.


Subject(s)
Kidney Transplantation , Tissue and Organ Procurement/methods , Tissue and Organ Procurement/organization & administration , Community-Based Participatory Research , Death , Emergency Medical Services , Humans , Informed Consent , New York City , Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest , Pilot Projects , Prospective Studies , Waiting Lists
9.
Ann Emerg Med ; 63(4): 392-400, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24268427

ABSTRACT

In the United States, more than 115,000 patients are wait-listed for organ transplants despite that there are 12,000 patients each year who die or become too ill for transplantation. One reason for the organ shortage is that candidates for donation must die in the hospital, not the emergency department (ED), either from neurologic or circulatory-respiratory death under controlled circumstances. Evidence from Spain and France suggests that a substantial number of deaths from cardiac arrest may qualify for organ donation using uncontrolled donation after circulatory determination of death (uDCDD) protocols that rapidly initiate organ preservation in out-of-hospital and ED settings. Despite its potential, uDCDD has been criticized by panels of experts that included neurologists, intensivists, attorneys, and ethicists who suggest that organ preservation strategies that reestablish oxygenated circulation to the brain retroactively negate previous death determination based on circulatory-respiratory criteria and hence violate the dead donor rule. In this article, we assert that in uDCDD, all efforts at saving lives are exhausted before organ donation is considered, and death is determined according to "irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions" evidenced by "persistent cessation of functions during an appropriate period of observation and/or trial of therapy." Therefore, postmortem in vivo organ preservation with chest compressions, mechanical ventilation, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation is legally and ethically appropriate. As frontline providers for patients presenting with unexpected cardiac arrest, emergency medicine practitioners need be included in the uDCDD debate to advocate for patients and honor the wishes of the deceased.


Subject(s)
Death , Health Policy , Tissue and Organ Procurement/methods , Blood Circulation , Humans , Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest/therapy , Policy Making , Resuscitation/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/standards , United States
11.
J Clin Ethics ; 24(2): 148-55, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23923814

ABSTRACT

Unlike bioethics mediators who are employed by healthcare organizations as outside consultants, mediators who are embedded in an institution must be authorized to chronicle a clinical ethics consultation (CEC) or a mediation in a patient's medical chart. This is an important privilege, as the chart is a legal document. In this article I discuss this important part of a bioethics mediator's tool kit in my presentation of a case illustrating how bioethics mediation may proceed, and what this approach using both bioethics and mediation may add.


Subject(s)
Consultants , Ethicists , Ethics Consultation , Medical Records/standards , Negotiating , Ethics, Medical , Humans , United States
12.
J Clin Ethics ; 24(1): 25-31, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23631332

ABSTRACT

In "Surmounting Elusive Barriers: The Case for Bioethics Mediation," Bergman argues that professionals trained in bioethics, reluctant to acquire the skills of mediation, would better be replaced by a cadre of mediators with some bioethics knowledge, to which I respond, "yes ... but."


Subject(s)
Bioethics/trends , Conflict of Interest , Conflict, Psychological , Ethicists/standards , Negotiating , Physician-Patient Relations/ethics , Power, Psychological , Humans
13.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 43(1): 19-26, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23254821

ABSTRACT

In the United States, when people die unexpectedly, they are usually not considered as organ donors because of the difficulty of keeping organs viable when death occurs outside the hospital, in "uncontrolled" circumstances. New protocols to permit donation in these cases have renewed the debate about how we decide whether a person has died- and whether the moral imperative to help those in need of transplant should affect the determination of death.


Subject(s)
Clinical Protocols , Death, Sudden , Death , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/legislation & jurisprudence , France , Humans , National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine, U.S., Health and Medicine Division , Spain , Third-Party Consent , United States
14.
J Clin Ethics ; 22(4): 373-9, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22324218

ABSTRACT

Autumn Fiester identifies an important element in clinical ethics consultation (CEC) that she labels, from the Greek, aporia, "state of perplexity," evidenced in CEC as ethical ambiguity. Fiester argues that the inherent difficulties of cases so characterized render them inappropriate for voting and more amenable to mediation and the search for consensus. This commentary supports Fiester's analysis and adds additional reasons for rejecting voting as a process for resolving disputes in CEC including: it distorts the analysis by empowering individual voters preferences and biases rather than focusing on the interests and wishes of the patient and family; it offers an insufficiently sensitive model for resolving the awesome, nuanced, conflicted, and ethically complex issues surrounding life and death; it marginalizes minority opinions that may have moral validity.


Subject(s)
Conflict, Psychological , Democracy , Ethics Consultation/ethics , Moral Obligations , Negotiating , Politics , Social Values , Humans , Male
15.
HEC Forum ; 22(1): 65-72, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20431916

ABSTRACT

The Clinical Ethics Credentialing Project (CECP) was intiated in 2007 in response to the lack of uniform standards for both the training of clinical ethics consultants, and for evaluating their work as consultants. CECP participants, all practicing clinical ethics consultants, met monthly to apply a standard evaluation instrument, the "QI tool", to their consultation notes. This paper describes, from a qualitative perspective, how participants grappled with applying standards to their work. Although the process was marked by resistance and disagreement, it was also noteworthy for the sustained engagement by participants over the year of the project, and a high level of acceptance by its conclusion.


Subject(s)
Ethics Consultation/standards , Quality Assurance, Health Care/methods , Credentialing , Ethicists/education , Ethicists/standards , Humans , New York City , Pilot Projects , Reference Standards
16.
Crit Care ; 13(5): 189, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19825202

ABSTRACT

It is well documented that transplants save lives and improve quality of life for patients suffering from kidney, liver, and heart failure. Uncontrolled donation after cardiac death (UDCD) is an effective and ethical alternative to existing efforts towards increasing the available pool of organs. However, people who die from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest are currently being denied the opportunity to be organ donors except in those few locations where out-of-hospital UDCD programs are active, such as in Paris, Madrid, and Barcelona. Societies have the medical and moral obligation to develop UDCD programs.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services , Myocardial Ischemia/mortality , Tissue and Organ Procurement/organization & administration , Humans , Program Evaluation , Tissue Donors , United States
18.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 39(6): 23-33, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20050368

ABSTRACT

Clinical ethics consultation has become an important resource, but unlike other health care disciplines, it has no accreditation or accepted curriculum for training programs, no standards for practice, and no way to measure effectiveness. The Clinical Ethics Credentialing Project was launched to pilot-test approaches to train, credential, privilege, and evaluate consultants.


Subject(s)
Credentialing , Ethicists/standards , Ethics Consultation/standards , Professional Autonomy , Professional Competence , Quality of Health Care , Advisory Committees , Credentialing/standards , Ethicists/education , Ethics Consultation/organization & administration , Ethics Consultation/trends , Ethics, Clinical , Ethics, Medical , Ethics, Professional , Humans , Medical Records , Social Responsibility
19.
Chest ; 133(5 Suppl): 51S-66S, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18460506

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Anticipated circumstances during the next severe influenza pandemic highlight the insufficiency of staff and equipment to meet the needs of all critically ill victims. It is plausible that an entire country could face simultaneous limitations, resulting in severe shortages of critical care resources to the point where patients could no longer receive all of the care that would usually be required and expected. There may even be such resource shortfalls that some patients would not be able to access even the most basic of life-sustaining interventions. Rationing of critical care in this circumstance would be difficult, yet may be unavoidable. Without planning, the provision of care would assuredly be chaotic, inequitable, and unfair. The Task Force for Mass Critical Care Working Group met in Chicago in January 2007 to proactively suggest guidance for allocating scarce critical care resources. TASK FORCE SUGGESTIONS: In order to allocate critical care resources when systems are overwhelmed, the Task Force for Mass Critical Care Working Group suggests the following: (1) an equitable triage process utilizing the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scoring system; (2) the concept of triage by a senior clinician(s) without direct clinical obligation, and a support system to implement and manage the triage process; (3) legal and ethical constructs underpinning the allocation of scarce resources; and (4) a mechanism for rapid revision of the triage process as further disaster experiences, research, planning, and modeling come to light.


Subject(s)
Critical Care/organization & administration , Health Care Rationing/organization & administration , Health Resources/organization & administration , Mass Casualty Incidents , Triage/organization & administration , Humans
20.
Virtual Mentor ; 10(2): 123-5, 2008 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23206828
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