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Erschienen in: Neurocritical Care 1/2015

01.08.2015 | Opinions and Arguments

Decision Aids and Shared Decision-Making in Neurocritical Care: An Unmet Need in Our NeuroICUs

verfasst von: Susanne Muehlschlegel, Lori Shutter, Nananda Col, Robert Goldberg

Erschienen in: Neurocritical Care | Ausgabe 1/2015

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Abstract

Improved resuscitation methods and advances in critical care have significantly increased the survival of patients presenting with devastating brain injuries compared to prior decades. After the patient’s stabilization phase, families and patients are faced with “goals-of-care” decisions about continuation of aggressive intensive care unit care or comfort care only (CMO). Highly varying rates of CMO between centers raise the question of “self-fulfilling prophecies.” Disease severity, the physician’s communication and the family’s understanding of projected outcomes, their uncertainties, complication risks with continued care, physician bias, and the patient’s and surrogate’s wishes and values all influence a CMO decision. Disease-specific decision support interventions, decision aids (DAs), may remedy these issues in the neurocritical care unit, potentially leading to better-informed and less-biased goals-of-care decisions in neurocritically ill patients, while increasing decision knowledge, confidence, and realistic expectations and decreasing decisional conflict and regret. Shared decision-making (SDM) is a collaborative process that enhances patients’ and proxies’ understanding about prognosis, encourages them to actively weigh the risks and benefits of a treatment, and considers the patient’s preferences and values to make better decisions. DAs are SDM tools, which have been successfully implemented for many other conditions to assist difficult decision-making. In this article, we summarize the purposes of SDM, the derivation of DAs, and their potential application in neurocritical care.
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Metadaten
Titel
Decision Aids and Shared Decision-Making in Neurocritical Care: An Unmet Need in Our NeuroICUs
verfasst von
Susanne Muehlschlegel
Lori Shutter
Nananda Col
Robert Goldberg
Publikationsdatum
01.08.2015
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Neurocritical Care / Ausgabe 1/2015
Print ISSN: 1541-6933
Elektronische ISSN: 1556-0961
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-014-0097-2

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