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Advance
Directives Found Key To Reducing Stress For Families Of Hospitalized
Patients At The End Of Life Researchers
from the Oregon Health Sciences University report that stress levels have been
measured as extremely high for family members who must decide whether or not
life support should be withdrawn from relatives too incapacitated to decide for
themselves. Reported levels of
stress are twice as high as those due to other serious crises, such as ferry or
construction disasters, or losing a home to fire. Stress was least severe when patients' written advance
directives were available and most severe in the absence of written or verbal
directives. Funded by the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR), the
study results appear in the March/April issue of the journal "Nursing
Research". "An
advance directive can be very helpful for families making decisions about end of
life issues," said NINR Director Patricia A. Grady, PhD, RN.
NINR coordinates NIH end-of-life/palliative care research, a relatively
new area of science. Dr. Grady indicated that less than 20 percent of adults have
advance directives, "which means we must find strategies to significantly
increase their use to diminish stress for both patients and families going
through life's final phase." The
study focused on 74 family members whose relatives had recently died in
hospitals. The researchers focused on hospital deaths because decisions to start
and stop life support more often occur in hospitals. Families were interviewed
twice -- at one to two months after the death of their relatives and again at
six to nine months afterwards. Their responses indicated that half a year later
their stress was still high but had notably improved. Information was also
collected from the doctors and nurses who had cared for the patients. The
researchers also studied how families made decisions. In the absence of advance
directives, families were more likely to push for prolonging life for the
patient even when the treatments were not working and the patient was suffering.
When the patient had a written advance directive to guide the family, the family
was more comfortable focusing on the patient's quality of life as the guide to
reaching the decision to stop life-sustaining treatments. Virginia
Tilden, DNSc, RN, the principal investigator of the study, stated "With
advance directives, families are able to concentrate on improving the patient's
quality of life during the time left, rather than futilely prolonging life, with
high risk of making patients suffer unnecessarily." Susan
Tolle, M.D., a co-investigator of the study, indicated that "nurses and
doctors can play a strong role in encouraging patients before they become
gravely ill to complete advance directives and to discuss them with their
families. This will reduce stress on their families down the road." According
to the study, families indicated that ending life support was the "hardest
thing I have ever done in my life." Typical
sentiments were "I wouldn't wish this [reaching a decision] on my worst
enemy," and "I can't remember what went on because I was so
upset." Other
study findings indicated that clinicians and families believed that poor quality
of life and patient preference not to suffer were about equal in importance in
deciding whether to withdraw life support. But families gave prolongation of
life a stronger consideration than did clinicians. Both groups indicated a patient's preference, if known, was
first among considerations about ending life support. The
National Institute of Nursing Research is a component of the National Institutes
of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. |