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Parental Views on Withdrawing Life-Sustaining Therapies in Critically Ill Children
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- Objective To broaden existing knowledge of pediatric end-of-life decision making by exploring factors described by parents of patients in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) as important/influential if they were to consider withdrawing life-sustaining therapies. Design Quantitative and qualitative analysis of semi-structured one-on-one interviews. Setting The PICUs at 2 tertiary care hospitals. Participants English- or Spanish-speaking parents who were older than 17 years and whose child was admitted to the PICU for more than 24 hours to up to 1 week. Intervention Semi-structured one-on-one interviews. Results Forty of 70 parents (57%) interviewed said they could imagine a situation in which they would consider withdrawing life-sustaining therapies. When asked if specific factors might influence their decision making, 64% of parents said they would consider withdrawing life-sustaining therapies if their child were suffering; 51% would make such a decision based on quality-of-life considerations; 43% acknowledged the influence of physician-estimated prognosis in their decision; and 7% said financial burden would affect their consideration. Qualitative analysis of their subsequent comments identified 9 factors influential to parents when considering withdrawing life-sustaining therapies: quality of life, suffering, ineffective treatments, faith, time, financial considerations, general rejection of withdrawing life-sustaining therapies, mistrust/doubt toward physicians, and reliance on self/intuition. Conclusion Parents describe a broad range of views regarding possible consideration of withdrawing life-sustaining therapies for their children and what factors might influence such a decision.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Parents
medicine.medical_specialty
Adolescent
Critical Illness
Decision Making
Pain
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
Trust
Tertiary care
Article
Time
Interviews as Topic
Young Adult
Qualitative analysis
Professional-Family Relations
Medicine
Humans
Rejection (Psychology)
Treatment Failure
Young adult
Intensive care medicine
Child
Pediatric intensive care unit
Withholding Treatment
business.industry
Critically ill
Infant
Health Care Costs
Middle Aged
Religion
Family medicine
Child, Preschool
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Quality of Life
Female
business
Intuition
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4c746a7c03061344cb8716af5376fc4e