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Doc
tors’
questions about End-of-Life Legalities may
result in Patient Pain
Newswise — When treatment options dwindle or
are exhausted, terminally ill-patients often
opt for pain management and comfort over
life-extending therapies.
However, a team of researchers from Wake
Forest University Baptist Medical Center,
University of Rochester Medical Center and
Unity Health System, report that a lack of
thorough understanding about the laws
governing end-of-life care may be leaving
many medical providers with an ethical
dilemma and causing some terminally-ill
patients considerable, unnecessary pain.
The report, appearing in a recent issue of
Mayo Clinic Proceedings, concerns the legal
and ethical issues involved with
deactivating an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
(ICD) in patients who are terminally-ill.
The ICD is a small, battery-powered
electrical impulse generator, much like a
pacemaker, that is implanted in patients who
are at risk of sudden cardiac death due to
ventricular fibrillation.
The device is programmed to detect cardiac
arrhythmia and correct it by delivering a
jolt of electricity, which is often
lifesaving.
However, the legality of deactivating the
ICD in terminally-ill patients who request
to stop receiving the therapy is not clearly
written, the study shows, and may be causing
doctors to subject dying patients to undue
pain.
The results stem from a physician survey
that collected information about doctors’
knowledge and preferences regarding the
medical, ethical and legal issues involved
in caring for terminally-ill patients with
an ICD.
In the brief, Vinodh Jeevanantham, M.D., of
Wake Forest Baptist, and colleagues identify
a general lack of knowledge among physicians
concerning ICD therapy in terminally-ill
patients that may result in extra suffering
for them.
The ICD has become the most effective
treatment for patients at high risk of
life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias.
It has been shown to improve survival,
especially in elderly patients, by sensing
changes in cardiac rhythm and delivering an
electrical shock to the heart to restore
normal rhythm.
Terminally-ill patients may be at increased
risk of ICD shocks due to electrolyte
disturbances, hypoxia and heart failure.
It is estimated that more than 3 million
people in North America are now eligible for
an ICD. With a growing elderly population in
the United States, clinicians are likely to
care for an increasing number of elderly
patients with ICDs.
The deactivation of an ICD, which may have
been placed years before the onset of a
terminal condition, may not be a clear-cut
decision for patients, families, or
physicians.
Although physicians are aware that ICDs save
lives by delivering an electrical shock and
that such shocks are associated with
considerable pain, busy clinicians may not
always re-analyze the risk-benefit ratio of
ICD therapy when their patient experiences a
terminal illness, the report states.
In this situation, life-prolonging therapy
may no longer be desired.
However, although guidelines for appropriate
ICD use are readily available, a glaring
deficiency exists regarding end-of-life care
for patients with an ICD, according to the
report, and the legality of deactivation is
not clearly spelled out.
There are also no clear-cut recommendations,
Jeevanantham said.
Although voluntary refusal of treatment is a
basic patient right, the study highlights a
lack of clarity regarding the laws
concerning ICD therapy in terminally-ill
patients.
“While 64 of the physicians who participated
in our survey had cared for terminally-ill
patients with an ICD, they were unaware of
any guidelines regarding deactivation of the
device in such patients,” the authors wrote.
Of the 204 surveys distributed within Unity
Health System between February and May 2007,
87 were returned.
Among the physicians who responded, 64
reported experience caring for a patient
with an ICD and terminal illness.
Forty physicians either thought it was
illegal or were not sure if it was legal to
deactivate an ICD in these circumstances.
However, if the physicians were to be
reassured about the legality of
discontinuing ICD therapy, 79 of these same
respondents said that they would be willing
to discuss voluntary ICD deactivation with
their dying patients.
On the other hand, 16 of the physicians
surveyed thought such action was either
unethical or possibly unethical, and 19
physicians were uncomfortable deactivating
an ICD in a terminally-ill patient, even
though 51 of the doctors reported believing
that an ICD-delivered shock would be painful
for the patient.
“Although patients are better able to
tolerate the shock from the ICD with time,
they may still find an ICD firing
frightening and painful,” the researchers
stated in their report.
“Our study showed that only 51 clinicians
thought that the shock therapy would be
uncomfortable.
"This
finding highlights the importance of
physician education regarding the ICD
functioning, particularly symptoms that
result from shock therapy.
“With increased knowledge about managing the
withdrawal of this potentially
life-prolonging therapy, physicians are
likely to become more skilled at caring for
dying patients with an ICD.”
Co-authors of the report were Saadia Sherazi,
M.D., James P. Daubert, M.D., and Robert C.
Block, M.D., all of University of Rochester
Medical Center, and Khalid Abdel-Gadir,
M.D., Michael R. DiSalle, M.D., James M.
Haley, M.D., and Abrar H. Shah, M.D., all of
Unity Health System, also in Rochester, N.Y.
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical
Center (www.wfubmc.edu) is an academic
health system comprised of North Carolina
Baptist Hospital, Brenner Children’s
Hospital, Wake Forest University Physicians,
and Wake Forest University Health Sciences,
which operates the university’s School of
Medicine and Piedmont Triad Research Park.
The system comprises 1,154 acute care,
rehabilitation and long-term care beds and
has been ranked as one of “America’s Best
Hospitals” by U.S. News & World Report since
1993. Wake Forest Baptist is ranked 32nd in
the nation by America’s Top Doctors for the
number of its doctors considered best by
their peers.
The
institution ranks in the top third in
funding by the National Institutes of Health
and fourth in the Southeast in revenues from
its licensed intellectual property.
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