[Withholding and withdrawing treatment in patients admitted in an Internal Medicine ward]

Rev Calid Asist. 2016 Mar-Apr;31(2):70-5. doi: 10.1016/j.cali.2015.11.004. Epub 2016 Jan 6.
[Article in Spanish]

Abstract

Introduction: Many of the patients admitted to a general medical ward have a compromised quality of life, or short life expectancy, so they are potential candidates for withhold/withdraw (WH/WD) treatment. The first objectif was to describe which measures were WH/WD among patients who died during their admission in a general medical ward from a tertiary hospital in Madrid. Secondly, to define the clinical characteristics of this population.

Material and methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study during 6 months from 2011 and 2012 of all the patients dead while their admission in the Internal Medicine Department.

Results: 2007 patients were admitted, 211 died (10.5%). 121 (57%) were female, with 85±9 years of mean age. 103 (48.8%) came from a residential facility and 105 fulfilled terminality criteria (49.8%). One decision to WH/WD treatment was made in 182 patients (86.3%, CI 95%: 81.4-91.1), two in 99 cases (46.9%, CI 95%: 39.9-53.9) and 3 or more in 31 subjects (14.7%, CI 95%: 9.6-19.7). The most frequent decisions involved do-not-resuscitate orders (154, 73.0%), rejection of «aggressive treatment measures» (80, 38.0%), use of antibiotics (19, 9.0%), admission in ICU (18, 8.5%), and/or surgical treatment (11, 5.2%).

Conclusions: WH/WD treatment is very frequent among patients who died in a general medical ward. The most frequent involved do-not-resuscitate orders and rejection of «aggressive treatment measures». WH/WD decisions are adopted in an elderly population, with extensive comorbidity and an elevated prevalence of advanced dementia and/or terminal disease.

Keywords: Decision making; Limitación del esfuerzo terapéutico; No resuscitation orders; Toma de decisiones; Withholding and withdrawing treatment; Órdenes de no reanimación.

MeSH terms

  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Decision Making
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Internal Medicine
  • Male
  • Quality of Life*
  • Resuscitation Orders*
  • Withholding Treatment*