Caregivers and Family Members’ Vulnerability in End-of-Life Decision-Making: An Assessment of How Vulnerability Shapes Clinical Choices and the Contribution of Clinical Ethics Consultation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting
Case Vignette 1 |
Does the physician always have to convince the patient’s entire social context? If the patient agrees to the treatment, why is it necessary for the physician to have the approval of family members or friends? Mr. G. was a 65-year-old physician, with a cohabitant partner and two sisters. He was admitted to the hospice with a neuroendocrine carcinoma diagnosis. He had infiltrate lung cancer and a complementary diagnosis reported atrial fibrillation, heart failure and anemia. He was hospitalized for a 39-day period prior to death. The patient was always alone during the night. His two sisters and partner regularly came in for visits. He also had a pair of friends (husband and wife) who were medically competent (one was a dentist and the other a general practitioner) but had no experience in palliative care. For them, palliative care meant keeping the patient in the hospice, letting him do whatever he wanted, and allowing him to make decisions regarding his condition and quality of life. The two sisters and partner were never questioned by the patient’s friends. They came to the hospice when the friends were not there. The partner agreed to symptom therapy, to appease the patient, and she approved the use of morphine so that the patient could breathe easier, thus reducing dyspnea. The friends came to halt any medical procedures, and to persuade the patient to do nothing after their initial visit to the facility. The patient was responsive to the palliative care to reduce the pain symptoms (he always accepted the treatment proposed by the doctors with an open mind and a positive attitude), but his friends persuaded him to change the therapy after every visit, with a hostile and critical attitude toward the treatment proposed by the doctors and accepted by the patient. They often said, “This treatment is no good! And you are no longer you!” For them, he was to live to the end of his life in full command of his own situation. He was completely conscious, although suffering and dyspneic, and he underestimated the symptoms, which were masked by morphine. The friends attributed his pain to a cardiological problem (cardiopathy), even though they knew that he would die from lung cancer. The ward physician was bewildered and disappointed. Confident in the suitability of the treatments proposed and shared with the patient, he found himself in an uncomfortable situation: on the one hand, he did not want to take away the patient’s ability to relate to his friends; on the other hand, he recognized the difficulty of communicating with them because of their critical and closed attitude. Another friend, a lawyer, was favorable to the palliative care, but the other two competent friends silenced him. There was much coming and going in the room and, in general, the patient seemed to willingly accept all these visits. A catheter was applied on day 32 after admission. On day 35, only a sister visited the patient. The patient was no longer able to stand up. For the four nights preceding his death, the patient slept in an orthostatic position, allowing him to breathe more easily. He was conscious and responsive until the evening preceding his death. As the patient was suffering intensely, during the evening of the patient’s last day of life, a sleeping-aid therapy with Midazolam 5 mg was initiated. He then rested until early in the morning and died later on the same day. |
Case Vignette 2 |
How do dying persons experience and manage the fear of being a burden on their families? Ms. A. was a 75-year-old widow who resided alone in Southern Italy. She had a single son living in the northern part of the country, whose wife suffered from multiple sclerosis and was undergoing experimental treatment. Ms. A. was diagnosed with stomach cancer, which was initially treated with a gastric resection. Her general condition progressively declined; a neoplastic stenosis requiring the application of a stent was detected 6 months following surgery. The patient was told that, prior to chemotherapy initiation, the positioning of the stent would be essential to improve her appetite and stabilize her general condition. She requested hospice admission to accelerate recovery. Throughout their lives, there had been a good relationship between mother and son, based on mutual trust. However, given the lack of discussion surrounding the existential difficulties implied in an inauspicious prognosis, the relationship between the two was progressively deteriorating. The son had been informed of his mother’s condition, but she did not know that he was fully aware of the situation. Ms. A. was aware of the diagnosis but expected to recover physically and to be able to undergo chemotherapy; therefore, she withheld information from her son. The son had been informed that chemotherapy would not be feasible, but did not disclose this information to his mother. During hospitalization, the contradiction between the lack of total honesty regarding her condition among family members and her frustration at not being able to live up to her son’s expectations emerged. There was often silence in the room. The son and mother would not speak, except about superficial things, leaving out the topics that would be meaningful for their future. This silence confused the patient and embarrassed the son. The patient felt frustrated, and the son felt guilty about failing to tell his mother the truth. The son shared his discomfort with the healthcare team. Together, they decided to progressively inform the patient about her prognosis, thereby creating a truthful climate in which, by acknowledging the expectations and goals of care, mother and son could have a more meaningful and truthful relationship. As a result, she was gradually helped to become aware of the severity of the situation and seemed to accept her condition. She also desired to be less of a burden to her son and daughter-in-law, given that the latter also suffered from a chronic pathology. This led to a state of discomfort and suffering. Throughout the following weeks, the progressive and delicate communication to the patient of her real condition, and therefore of the unlikeliness of further specific therapies (chemotherapy), allowed her to accept her condition and led to a clear reduction in her existential suffering. This led to a terminal phase during which the patient, the son and the daughter-in-law were able to share frank communication and a sincere relationship. The patient became less and less independent, and her son and his wife welcomed her to their home after hospice discharge. |
2.2. Definition of the Key Terms
2.3. Study Instrument
3. Results
3.1. Vulnerability and Ethical Challenges
3.2. Contribution of Clinical Ethics Consultation
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
A Case 1 | B Case 2 | ||
---|---|---|---|
(1) Who needs the CEC? | The physician | Medical and nursing staff | |
Why is it required? What is/are the issue(s) at stake? | To understand the necessity for HCPs to obtain treatment agreement by friends. | To understand how best to manage the patient’s fear of being a burden to her son. | |
How urgent is it? | The request was not urgent, but CEC was performed within 3 h of the request. | The request was not urgent, but CEC was performed within 24 h of the request with the entire HCP team. | |
Is/are there any doubts? | The doubt was about the actual role of friends and their negative influence on the patient to the detriment of the HCP team. The dilemma was between pushing them away to the detriment of the patient’s willingness to see them and accommodating their doubts by creating a pathway to explain/define the valid reasons for the specific course of treatment. | The question was how to create a “truthful environment” so that the patient could recalibrate her treatment goals and have a truthful relationship with her son. | |
Is/are there any other actors who share the same doubts? | The nursing staff | No | |
(2) Who is involved? | Patient’s friends, family members and HCPs, EC | Patient, patient’s son, HCPs, EC | |
What is the patient’s history, diagnosis and prognosis? | 65 yo, m, neuroendocrine carcinoma, infiltrate lung cancer and complementary diagnosis reported atrial fibrillation, heart failure, and anemia, terminal prognosis. | 75 yo, f, stomach cancer with neoplastic stenosis, irreversible prognosis. | |
What are the patient’s preferences? | Preserve relationships with significant others and share decisions regarding the care pathway. | To live up to her son’s expectations (e.g., to be able to act autonomously and recover physically before undergoing chemotherapy). | |
Are there any other actors involved in this case? | Yes, family members. | Yes, the son’s wife, who had multiple sclerosis. | |
What are their respective roles and ideas? | His friends criticized the palliative care pathway. | The son’s wife wished to have a truthful relationship with her mother-in-law. | |
Have they also expressed a similar doubt? | No | Yes | |
(3) Why does this problem exist? | Friends questioned the patient–physician relationship. | Accepting that the patient could live her last days peacefully and aware of her medical condition (e.g., to ensure that the patient’s clinical condition would not adversely affect the mother–son relationship). | |
What are the difficulties? | To start a series of dialogues to make the valid reasons for the care pathway explicit. | To communicate and recognize the severity of the prognosis. | |
What are the proportionated options? | Maintaining the relationship with friends with the help of HCPs and agree upon the most appropriate course of care to alleviate suffering. | To create a truthful climate. | |
What are the principles/values that need to be balanced? | Patient’s autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence | Patient’s autonomy, beneficence and trust | |
Are there any similar cases reported in the literature? | No | Yes | |
What are the positions of other people involved? | The two sisters and partner were never questioned by the patient’s friends. They came in for visits when friends were not there. | No | |
(4) How to offer a solution? | Guaranteeing that friends can discuss and be informed about the appropriateness of current treatments. | Making the patient aware of the seriousness of her situation. | |
What are the possible solutions including pros and cons? | A series of meetings with the attending physician. Pro: maintaining the relationship. Con: extra work for the physician. | Not leaving the patient alone during and after sharing with her the severity of the prognosis. | |
Have these been discussed throughout an appropriate number of encounters to persistently enable the relational dimension? | Yes (20 encounters since hospitalization) | Yes (5 encounters since hospitalization) | |
Have all the options been understood by decision-makers? | Yes | Yes | |
Is the final decision respectful of the patient’s good and his/her own history? | Yes | Yes |
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Nicoli, F.; Grossi, A.A.; Picozzi, M. Caregivers and Family Members’ Vulnerability in End-of-Life Decision-Making: An Assessment of How Vulnerability Shapes Clinical Choices and the Contribution of Clinical Ethics Consultation. Philosophies 2024, 9, 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010014
Nicoli F, Grossi AA, Picozzi M. Caregivers and Family Members’ Vulnerability in End-of-Life Decision-Making: An Assessment of How Vulnerability Shapes Clinical Choices and the Contribution of Clinical Ethics Consultation. Philosophies. 2024; 9(1):14. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010014
Chicago/Turabian StyleNicoli, Federico, Alessandra Agnese Grossi, and Mario Picozzi. 2024. "Caregivers and Family Members’ Vulnerability in End-of-Life Decision-Making: An Assessment of How Vulnerability Shapes Clinical Choices and the Contribution of Clinical Ethics Consultation" Philosophies 9, no. 1: 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010014
APA StyleNicoli, F., Grossi, A. A., & Picozzi, M. (2024). Caregivers and Family Members’ Vulnerability in End-of-Life Decision-Making: An Assessment of How Vulnerability Shapes Clinical Choices and the Contribution of Clinical Ethics Consultation. Philosophies, 9(1), 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010014