End-of-life practices in 282 intensive care units: data from the SAPS 3 database
- 10 October 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Intensive Care Medicine
- Vol. 35 (4) , 623-630
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-008-1310-6
Abstract
Objective To report incidence and characteristics of decisions to forgo life-sustaining therapies (DFLSTs) in the 282 ICUs who contributed to the SAPS3 database. Methods We reviewed data on DFLSTs in 14,488 patients. Independent predictors of DFLSTs have been identified by stepwise logistic regression. Results DFLSTs occurred in 1,239 (8.6%) patients [677 (54.6%) withholding and 562 (45.4%) withdrawal decisions]. Hospital mortality was 21% (3,050/14,488); 36.2% (1,105) deaths occurred after DFLSTs. Across the participating ICUs, hospital mortality in patients with DFLSTs ranged from 80.3 to 95.4% and time from admission to decisions ranged from 2 to 4 days. Independent predictors of decisions to forgo LSTs included 13 variables associated with increased incidence of DFLSTs and 7 variables associated with decrease incidence of DFLST. Among hospital and ICU-related variables, a higher number of nurses per bed was associated with increased incidence of DFLST, while availability of an emergency department in the same hospital, presence of a full time ICU-specialist and doctors presence during nights and week-ends were associated with a decreased incidence of DFLST. Conclusion This large study identifies structural variables that are associated with substantial variations in the incidence and the characteristics of decisions to forgo life-sustaining therapies.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- SAPS 3—From evaluation of the patient to evaluation of the intensive care unit. Part 2: Development of a prognostic model for hospital mortality at ICU admissionIntensive Care Medicine, 2005
- SAPS 3—From evaluation of the patient to evaluation of the intensive care unit. Part 1: Objectives, methods and cohort descriptionIntensive Care Medicine, 2005
- Withdrawal of Mechanical Ventilation in Anticipation of Death in the Intensive Care UnitNew England Journal of Medicine, 2003
- Do Specialists Differ on Do-Not-Resuscitate Decisions?Chest, 2002
- Forgoing life support in western European intensive care unitsCritical Care Medicine, 1999
- Withdrawal and withholding of life support in the intensive care unit: A comparison of teaching and community hospitalsCritical Care Medicine, 1998
- Private attending physician status and the withdrawal of life-sustaining interventions in a medical intensive care unit populationCritical Care Medicine, 1996
- Withholding and Withdrawal of Life Support from the Critically IllNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Initiating and Withdrawing Life SupportNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- SHOULD PHYSICIANS WITHHOLD LIFE-SUSTAINING CARE FROM PATIENTS WHO ARE NOT TERMINALLY ILL?The Lancet, 1988