Characteristics and outcomes of ethics consultations in an oncologic intensive care unit Journal Article


Authors: Voigt, L. P.; Rajendram, P.; Shuman, A. G.; Kamat, S.; McCabe, M. S.; Kostelecky, N.; Pastores, S. M.; Halpern, N. A.
Article Title: Characteristics and outcomes of ethics consultations in an oncologic intensive care unit
Abstract: Objective: To evaluate the frequency, characteristics, and outcomes of ethics consultations in critically ill patients with cancer. Design, Setting, and Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of all adult patients with cancer who were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) of a comprehensive cancer center and had an ethics consultation between September 2007 and December 2011. Demographic and clinical variables were abstracted along with the details and contexts of the ethics consultations. Main Results: Ethics consultations were obtained on 53 patients (representing 1% of all ICU admissions). The majority (90%) of patients had advanced-stage malignancies, had received oncologic therapies within the past 12 months, and required mechanical ventilation and/or vasopressor therapy for respiratory failure and/or severe sepsis. Two-thirds of the patients lacked decision-making capacity and nearly all had surrogates. The most common reasons for ethics consultations were disagreements between the patients/surrogates and the ICU team regarding end-of-life care. After ethics consultations, the surrogates agreed with the recommendations made by the ICU team on the goals of care in 85% of patients. Moreover, ethics consultations facilitated the provision of palliative medicine and chaplaincy services to several patients who did not have these services offered to them prior to the ethics consultations. Conclusion: Our study showed that ethics consultations were helpful in resolving seemingly irreconcilable differences between the ICU team and the patients' surrogates in the majority of cases. Additionally, these consultations identified the need for an increased provision of palliative care and chaplaincy visits for patients and their surrogates at the end of life. © 2015 SAGE Publications.
Keywords: major clinical study; outcome assessment; palliative care; palliative therapy; cancer center; intensive care unit; health care personnel; terminal care; medical ethics; ethics; end of life; hypertensive factor; respiratory failure; critically ill patient; living will; cancer; human; male; female; priority journal; article; ethics consultations
Journal Title: Journal of Intensive Care Medicine
Volume: 30
Issue: 7
ISSN: 0885-0666
Publisher: Sage Publications  
Date Published: 2015-10-01
Start Page: 436
End Page: 442
Language: English
DOI: 10.1177/0885066614538389
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24916755
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 2 October 2015 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Neil A Halpern
    151 Halpern
  2. Stephen Pastores
    249 Pastores
  3. Louis Pierre-Paul Voigt
    85 Voigt
  4. Natalie Theresa Remor
    39 Remor
  5. Sunil Gurudas Kamat
    4 Kamat
  6. Andrew Gregg Shuman
    24 Shuman
  7. Mary McCabe
    108 McCabe