Back to Search Start Over

Withholding and withdrawing life-support in adults in emergency care: joint position paper from the French Intensive Care Society and French Society of Emergency Medicine

Authors :
Jean Reignier
Anne-Laure Feral-Pierssens
Thierry Boulain
Françoise Carpentier
Pierrick Le Borgne
Denis Del Nista
Gilles Potel
Sandrine Dray
Delphine Hugenschmitt
Alexandra Laurent
Agnès Ricard-Hibon
Thierry Vanderlinden
Tahar Chouihed
For the French Society of Emergency Medicine (Société Française de Médecine d’Urgence, SFMU) and French Intensive Care Society (Société de Réanimation de Langue Française, SRLF)
Source :
Annals of Intensive Care, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract For many patients, notably among elderly nursing home residents, no plans about end-of-life decisions and palliative care are made. Consequently, when these patients experience life-threatening events, decisions to withhold or withdraw life-support raise major challenges for emergency healthcare professionals. Emergency department premises are not designed for providing the psychological and technical components of end-of-life care. The continuous inflow of large numbers of patients leaves little time for detailed assessments, and emergency department staff often lack training in end-of-life issues. For prehospital medical teams (in France, the physician-staffed mobile emergency and intensive care units known as SMURs), implementing treatment withholding and withdrawal decisions that may have been made before the acute event is not the main focus. The challenge lies in circumventing the apparent contradiction between the need to make immediate decisions and the requirement to set up a complex treatment project that may lead to treatment withholding and/or withdrawal. Laws and recommendations are of little assistance for making treatment withholding and withdrawal decisions in the emergency setting. The French Intensive Care Society (Société de Réanimation de Langue Française, SRLF) and French Society of Emergency Medicine (Société Française de Médecine d’Urgence, SFMU) tasked a panel of emergency physicians and intensivists with developing a document to serve both as a position paper on life-support withholding and withdrawal in the emergency setting and as a guide for professionals providing emergency care. The task force based its work on the available legislation and recommendations and on a review of published studies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21105820
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Annals of Intensive Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3d42e968e98f4c4ead4fee200d77a117
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13613-019-0579-7