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Do-not-resuscitate and treatment limitation decisions – Six years of experience from a Portuguese General Intensive Care Unit

SUMMARY

OBJECTIVE

Treatment limitation, as well as do-not-resuscitate (DNR) directives, are difficult but important to improve patients’ quality of life and minimize dysthanasia. We aimed to study the approach to withholding, withdrawal, and DNR decisions, patients’ characteristics, and process documentation in a general Intensive Care Unit (ICU) in Portugal.

METHODS

A retrospective analysis of data regarding the limitation of treatment decisions collected from previously-designed forms and complemented by medical record consultation.

RESULTS

A total of 1602 patients were admitted to the ICU between 2011 and 2016. DNR decisions were documented in 127 cases (7.9%). Patients with treatment limitations were older and had higher Simplified Acute Physiology Score II. The most frequent diagnosis preceding these decisions was sepsis (52.0%, n = 66); the most common main reason for limiting treatment was a poor prognosis of acute illness. Of the patients to whom a DNR was implemented, 117 (92.1%) died in the ICU (40.1% of the total number of ICU deaths), and hospital mortality was 100%. Participants in these decisions, as well as types of treatment withdrawn and their respective timings, were not registered in medical records.

CONCLUSION

Treatment limitation and DNR decisions were relatively common, in line with other Southern European studies, but behind Northern European and North American centers. Patients with these limitations were older and more severely ill than patients without such decisions. Documentation of these processes should be clear and detailed, either in specific forms or computerized clinical records; there is room for improvement in this area.

Palliative care; Critical Care; Resuscitation Orders; Critical Illness; Withholding Treatment

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