In the Midst of Life (48 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Worth

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In
2006 the Termination of Resuscitation Study investigators in Ontario reported on the development of a theoretical rule which would predict a low chance of survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest to hospital discharge.
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Where there was no return of spontaneous circulation, no defibrillation shocks had been administered, and the arrest was not witnessed by the emergency services, the rule recommended termination of resuscitation. Of 776 patients with cardiac arrest for whom the rule recommended termination of resuscitation, only four survived (0.5 per cent) to hospital discharge. If the additional criteria of an emergency services response interval of more than eight minutes, were included, together with the arrest not being witnessed by a bystander, then this rule would have proved 100 per cent accurate. These factors should not be used to avoid resuscitation in all such cases, and they should not be applied automatically or be allowed to over-ride clinical assessments. However, they can be very helpful in judging the value or futility of attempting resuscitation or continuing resuscitation of victims of an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

Many resuscitations on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest victims are inevitably delayed, and the consequence can be brain injury or damage from lack of circulation and oxygen. It is very difficult to predict the likelihood of recovery from acute brain injury at the time of the arrest, and some patients do make a full recovery.

There are specific circumstances when a full recovery can occur after a long delay, such as cases of electrocution, drowning, hypothermia, poisoning, or anaphylactic (allergic) shock. According to the Resuscitation Council, by three days after the onset of coma related to cardiac arrest, fifty per cent of patients have died.† The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation consensus statement on ‘post cardiac arrest syndrome’ states that the most
reliable predictor of a poor outcome (vegetative state or brain death) is the absence of a pupillary light response, corneal reflex, or motor response to painful stimuli at seventy-two hours.
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On the basis of a systematic review of the literature, absent brain-stem reflexes or a low Glasgow Coma Scale motor score at seventy-two hours is reliable in predicting a poor outcome.

The frequency of prolonged coma or permanent brain disability after resuscitation will depend on the underlying cause of the cardio-pulmonary arrest, and the speed with which resuscitation was undertaken. A study published in 1997 of 464 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in Bonn over three years reported that seventy-four patients (sixteen per cent) were discharged from hospital.f Thirty-four (7.3 per cent) were discharged alive without neurological deficit, twenty-two patients (4.7 per cent) were discharged with mild cerebral disability, nine (1.9 per cent) were discharged with severe residual cerebral disability, and a further nine (1.9 per cent) were in a persistent coma.

Should resuscitation always be attempted?

Traditionally it has been taught that resuscitation should always be attempted in people who have collapsed or in patients whose condition has suddenly deteriorated. The case of Karen Ann Quinlan in the United States of America changed medical practice and provided a focus to moral teaching about death and resuscitation.

In 1975, aged twenty-one years old, Karen Ann Quinlan was found unconscious and not breathing in bed shortly after consuming alcohol and drugs at a party. Resuscitation was performed, but she did not regain consciousness and remained in
a persistent vegetative state for several months. Her family felt that she would never recover, and wanted to withdraw medical treatment including mechanical ventilation. Medical and hospital staff refused, on the basis that this would result in her intended and hastened death; the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that the patient or their guardian had the right to determine their treatment, that medical staff had no rights independent of the patient, and that there was no obligation for medical staff to use extraordinary means to preserve life. This ruling confirmed the principle that medical treatment could be withdrawn, and resuscitation did not necessarily have to be attempted. Karen Ann Quinlan became known as the ‘right to die’ case.

The case also resulted in clarification of the legal status of ‘Do Not Attempt Resuscitation’ orders, and the concept of advanced directives with regard to possible future scenarios or treatments. It reaffirmed the idea that a patient always has the right to refuse extraordinary means of treatment, even if it will hasten their death. Furthermore, the Karen Ann Quinlan case resulted in the establishment of Ethics Committees in many hospitals to provide guidance to clinical staff in situations where patients do not consent to recommended treatments, or where unreasonable treatment is demanded.

Do Not Attempt Resuscitation

If a heart attack is treated promptly with defibrillation, and if other emergency treatment prevents damage to the heart, the patient can often return to a normal life and have a normal life expectancy. Clearly resuscitation in this circumstance would be worthwhile. On the other hand, if a patient with an advanced disease, such as terminal cancer or terminal lung failure, develops a sudden lethal cardiac rhythm disorder, successful resuscitation might result in limited benefit, such as survival for a few more days or weeks, potentially in the context of receiving intensive medical care. Many people would regard this second example of resuscitation as futile, or of limited value. Between these two examples are many shades of grey, and it is good medical practice to try to establish the likely
value or futility of emergency resuscitation in each patient during acute illness or admission to hospital. It is also good medical practice to try to think about the likely value of undertaking emergency resuscitation if someone has a chronic progressive and untreatable condition.

A discussion about the benefits or futility of resuscitation can be difficult for someone if they have not considered the matter beforehand, particularly in the case of a newly diagnosed acute illness with limited treatment or with a grave prognosis. On the other hand, most people will want to talk, learn about and discuss their illness, especially when they are anxious or frightened. Talking about the prognosis should be a natural part of the discussion, although doctors often do not raise the subject of death if patients do not ask, and patients can be too uncertain or too frightened to ask. In my experience most people prefer quality of life to longevity but occasionally people will want to keep going for a specific reason even if they are very unwell, such as a family event like the wedding of a son or daughter, the birth of a grandchild, or the completion of an important project.

Questions about resuscitation are not usually a simple yes or no decision. For example, most people who are not in an advanced terminal illness would want to be resuscitated from a simple cardiac rhythm disturbance or from transient difficulty in breathing due to infection, but often would not want prolonged intensive care with supportive treatment on an artificial ventilator or on kidney dialysis. Thus, any clinical discussion of resuscitation should include what types of resuscitation might be undertaken, and how far-reaching these directives might be. If the conclusion is that the person does not want to be resuscitated from their current illness, then this wish must be respected, and a note or statement made in their medical records to this effect. This statement should be as precise as possible, for example: ‘this person does not wish to be resuscitated from a cardio-respiratory arrest’. When patients have decided that they do not wish to be resuscitated, almost all hospitals have specific ‘Do Not Attempt Resuscitation’ (DNAR) forms for completion by an experienced doctor. There is a model DNAR
form, as well as a model patient information leaflet, available on the Resuscitation Council website.
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Most hospitals also have a resuscitation committee, which will agree local policies on the application of Do Not Attempt Resuscitation decisions, and audit the appropriateness of these orders.

It can take a considerable amount of time for doctors to explain resuscitation issues to patients, and for clinicians to understand the wishes of the patient - such discussions are usually sensitive, exploratory and wide-ranging, and often require several conversations. Modern hospital practice usually involves shift work, and often there are several different doctors looking after each patient. It is essential that the clinical team makes time to discuss resuscitation decisions with each patient, and that there is a consistent response from each clinician.

Almost every hospital has introduced Do Not Attempt Resuscitation policies, procedures and forms, and clinical staff have become better at discussing death and resuscitation with patients. For those involved in hospice care and palliative care teams, however, the management of death goes well beyond the issue of whether to resuscitate or not. An alternative, more positive way of thinking about death in people with advanced disease is labelled Allow a Natural Death’ (AND).

Allowing a natural death simply means not interfering with the dying process whilst providing care that will keep the patient as comfortable as possible. Allow a Natural Death orders are intended for terminally ill patients who are being cared for in hospices, care homes or at home, but there is no reason why these should not be applied to patients in acute hospital wards as well. The NHS Gold Standards Framework enables generic care providers, such as primary care, care homes, and palliative care settings to deliver a gold standard of care for all people nearing the end of their life,

and there is an ‘Allow a Natural Death’ form
on their website.
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The Avon, Somerset and Wiltshire Cancer Services also have an ‘Allow a Natural Death’ form on their website.

Dignity in Dying is an organisation dedicated to ensuring choice about where to die, who is present during death and treatment options, and provides access to expert information, good quality end-of-life care, support for loved ones and carers, together with advice on symptoms, and pain relief

A decision to ‘Allow a Natural Death’ should be communicated in writing by professional clinicians to the local Ambulance or Emergency Services dispatch control centre to avoid resuscitation if that person should unexpectedly collapse. However, at present there are no national arrangements or systematic ways of communicating DNAR orders across
all
potential healthcare settings. We already use national NHS consent and DNAR forms in our hospitals, so it should not be difficult to extend this and register such forms with the emergency services; Advanced Directives or “Living Wills” could also be included. Of course, a DNAR form or Advanced Directive would need to satisfy the various legal requirements of a written document: it must be signed by the patient and a witness, the patient must have demonstrated adequate mental capacity to make the decision at the time, and the order or directive would have to be applicable to their current illness or condition. Safeguards against fraudulent entries and the influence of overzealous relatives would be necessary - for example, the witness and co-signatory might be a person who knows the patient in a professional capacity, such as their GP, solicitor, priest or minister. Arrangements could be made for patients to reregister or renew these documents annually. Obviously, legal and confidentiality safeguards would also be required with regard to the sharing of the information contained in these forms across different emergency services and healthcare
organisations. Such forms could be stored electronically and shared online so that when an emergency call is received about a patient with a DNAR order or Advanced Directive, this would immediately be flagged up and the contents notified to the emergency controller.

Clinical staff are not obliged to offer resuscitation to every patient; doctors do not have to offer or provide treatments that are futile. If a patient has an advanced terminal illness with no realistic chance of improvement, doctors do not have to undertake resuscitation in the event of a cardio-respiratory arrest; it would be considered unethical. However, sometimes a patient or their family cannot accept that unavoidable death may be close, and insist that ‘everything must be done’. Where there is a persistent discrepancy between the views of the patient or their family and the clinical staff, it is good medical practice to seek additional opinions and advice from experienced doctors not directly involved in the case.

The General Medical Council in The United Kingdom has published guidance on ‘Treatment and care towards the end of life: Good practice in decision making’.
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This guidance is based on long-established ethical principles, which include a doctor’s obligation to show respect for human life; to protect the health of patients; to treat patients with respect; and to make the care of their patient their first concern. Patients who are approaching the end of their life need high-quality treatment and care to help them to live as well as possible until they die, and to die with dignity. The guidance identifies a number of challenges in ensuring that patients receive such care, and provides a framework to support doctors in addressing the issues in a way that will meet the needs of individual patients. It emphasises the importance of communication between clinicians and healthcare teams when patients move between different care settings (hospital, ambulance, care home), and during any out-of-hours period. Failure to communicate
relevant information can lead to inappropriate treatment being given or failure to meet the patient’s needs.

Mental capacity to decide on resuscitation

Decisions relating to resuscitation cannot be made by patients who are not mentally capable of understanding their condition, the obvious example being when the patient is unconscious. A patient must be able to understand, retain, and weigh information about themselves, and be able to communicate in some form, in order to make a rational decision about their medical care.

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