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1.
Am J Bioeth ; 17(5): 6-16, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28430068

ABSTRACT

Two potentially lifesaving protocols, emergency preservation and resuscitation (EPR) and uncontrolled donation after circulatory determination of death (uDCDD), currently implemented in some U.S. emergency departments (EDs), have similar eligibility criteria and initial technical procedures, but critically different goals. Both follow unsuccessful cardiopulmonary resuscitation and induce hypothermia to "buy time": one in trauma patients suffering cardiac arrest, to enable surgical repair, and the other in patients who unexpectedly die in the ED, to enable organ donation. This article argues that to fulfill patient-focused fiduciary obligations and maintain community trust, institutions implementing both protocols should adopt and publicize policies to guide ED physicians to utilize either protocol for particular patients, in order to address the appearance of conflict of interest arising from the protocols' similarities. It concludes by analyzing ethical implications of incentives that may influence institutions to develop the expertise required for uDCDD but not EPR.


Subject(s)
Bioethical Issues , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation , Clinical Protocols , Death , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Policy , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Clinical Competence , Conflict of Interest , Ethical Analysis , Goals , Heart Arrest/surgery , Humans , Informed Consent , Motivation , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Trust , United States
2.
Prog Transplant ; 26(1): 21-7, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27136246

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the United States, organ donation after circulatory death (DCD) determination is increasing among those who are removed from life-sustaining therapy but is rare when death is unexpected. We created a program for uncontrolled DCD (uDCD). METHODS: A comprehensive program was created to train personnel to identify and respond quickly to potential donors after unexpected death. The process termed Condition T was implemented in the emergency department (ED) of 2 academic medical centers. All ED deaths were screened for uDCD potential. Eligible donors included patients with preexisting donor designation who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation, failed to respond, and were pronounced dead. RESULTS: Over 350 nurses, physicians, perfusionists, organ procurement personnel, and administrators were trained. From February 2009 to June 2010, a total of 18 patients were potential Condition T candidates. Six Condition T responses were triggered. Three donors underwent cannulation, and 4 organs were recovered (3 kidney and 1 liver) from 2 donors. Time from Condition T trigger to perfusion with organ preservation solution ranged from 14 to 22.3 minutes. Perfusion duration was 197 and 221 minutes. No recovered organs were transplanted because biopsies showed prolonged warm ischemia. CONCLUSIONS: It is feasible to create a process to rapidly intervene in the ED for uDCD. However, no organ transplants resulted. The utility and sustainability of an uDCD program in this particular setting are questionable.


Subject(s)
Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Health Personnel/organization & administration , Hospitals, University , Tissue and Organ Procurement/organization & administration , Adult , Female , Health Personnel/education , Heart Arrest , Humans , Male , Mass Screening , Middle Aged , Time Factors , Tissue and Organ Procurement/methods , Warm Ischemia
3.
Crit Care Med ; 43(6): 1291-325, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25978154

ABSTRACT

This document was developed through the collaborative efforts of the Society of Critical Care Medicine, the American College of Chest Physicians, and the Association of Organ Procurement Organizations. Under the auspices of these societies, a multidisciplinary, multi-institutional task force was convened, incorporating expertise in critical care medicine, organ donor management, and transplantation. Members of the task force were divided into 13 subcommittees, each focused on one of the following general or organ-specific areas: death determination using neurologic criteria, donation after circulatory death determination, authorization process, general contraindications to donation, hemodynamic management, endocrine dysfunction and hormone replacement therapy, pediatric donor management, cardiac donation, lung donation, liver donation, kidney donation, small bowel donation, and pancreas donation. Subcommittees were charged with generating a series of management-related questions related to their topic. For each question, subcommittees provided a summary of relevant literature and specific recommendations. The specific recommendations were approved by all members of the task force and then assembled into a complete document. Because the available literature was overwhelmingly comprised of observational studies and case series, representing low-quality evidence, a decision was made that the document would assume the form of a consensus statement rather than a formally graded guideline. The goal of this document is to provide critical care practitioners with essential information and practical recommendations related to management of the potential organ donor, based on the available literature and expert consensus.


Subject(s)
Intensive Care Units/organization & administration , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Tissue Donors , Tissue and Organ Procurement/organization & administration , Death , Humans , Intensive Care Units/standards , Patient Rights , Societies, Medical , Tissue and Organ Procurement/standards , United States
4.
Ann Emerg Med ; 63(4): 384-90, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23796628

ABSTRACT

One barrier for implementing programs of uncontrolled organ donation after the circulatory determination of death is the lack of consensus on the precise moment of death. Our panel was convened to study this question after we performed a similar analysis on the moment of death in controlled organ donation after the circulatory determination of death. We concluded that death could be determined by showing the permanent or irreversible cessation of circulation and respiration. Circulatory irreversibility may be presumed when optimal cardiopulmonary resuscitation efforts have failed to restore circulation and at least a 7-minute period has elapsed thereafter during which autoresuscitation to restored circulation could occur. We advise against the use of postmortem organ support technologies that reestablish circulation of warm oxygenated blood because of their risk of retroactively invalidating the required conditions on which death was declared.


Subject(s)
Death , Tissue and Organ Procurement/methods , Advisory Committees , Blood Circulation , Brain Death , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation , Clinical Protocols , Humans , Tissue Donors , Tissue and Organ Procurement/standards , United States
5.
Nat Med ; 11(11): 1145-9, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16270065

ABSTRACT

The objective of the multidisciplinary expert Consensus Panel on Research with the Recently Dead (CPRRD) was to craft ethics guidelines for research with the recently dead. The CPRRD recommends that research with the recently dead: (i) receive scientific and ethical review and oversight; (ii) involve the community of potential research subjects; (iii) be coordinated with organ procurement organizations; (iv) not conflict with organ donation or required autopsy; (v) use procedures respectful of the dead; (vi) be restricted to one procedure per day; (vii) preferably be authorized by first-person consent, though both general advance research directives and surrogate consent are acceptable; (viii) protect confidentiality; (ix) not impose costs on subjects' estates or next of kin and not involve payment; (x) clearly explain ultimate disposition of the body.


Subject(s)
Death , Ethical Review , Ethics Committees, Research , Guidelines as Topic , Research , Humans , United States
6.
Am J Bioeth ; 17(7): W1-W3, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28661729
7.
Crit Care Med ; 39(1): 65-72, 2011 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20935559

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Cardiorespiratory instability may be undetected in monitored step-down unit patients. We explored whether using an integrated monitoring system that continuously amalgamates single noninvasive monitoring parameters (heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and peripheral oxygen saturation) into AN instability index value (INDEX) correlated with our single-parameter cardiorespiratory instability concern criteria, and whether nurse response to INDEX alert for patient attention was associated with instability reduction. DESIGN: Prospective, longitudinal evaluation in sequential 8-, 16-, and 8-wk phases (phase I, phase II, and phase III, respectively). SETTING: A 24-bed trauma step-down unit in single urban tertiary care center. PATIENTS: All monitored patients. INTERVENTIONS: Phase I: Patients received continuous single-channel monitoring (heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and peripheral oxygen saturation) and standard care; INDEX background was recorded but not displayed. Phase II: INDEX was background-recorded; staff was educated on use. Phase III: Staff used a clinical response algorithm for INDEX alerts. MEASUREMENT AND MAIN RESULTS: Any monitored parameters even transiently beyond local cardiorespiratory instability concern triggers (heart rate of <40 or >140 beats/min, respiratory rate of <8 or >36 breaths/min, systolic blood pressure of <80 or >200 mm Hg, diastolic blood pressure of >110 mm Hg, and peripheral oxygen saturation of <85%) defined INSTABILITYmin. INSTABILITYmin further judged as both persistent and serious defined INSTABILITYfull. The INDEX alert states were defined as INDEXmin and INDEXfull by using same classification. Phase I and phase III admissions (323 vs. 308) and monitoring (18,258 vs. 18,314 hrs) were similar. INDEXmin and INDEXfull correlated significantly with INSTABILITYmin and INSTABILITYfull (r = .713 and r = .815, respectively, p < .0001). INDEXmin occurred before INSTABILITYmin in 80% of cases (mean advance time 9.4 ± 9.2 mins). Phase I and phase III admissions were similarly likely to develop INSTABILITYmin (35% vs. 33%), but INSTABILITYmin duration/admission decreased from phase I to phase III (p = .018). Both INSTABILITYfull episodes/admission (p = .03) and INSTABILITYfull duration/admission (p = .05) decreased in phase III. CONCLUSION: The integrated monitoring system INDEX correlated significantly with cardiorespiratory instability concern criteria, usually occurred before overt instability, and when coupled with a nursing alert was associated with decreased cardiorespiratory instability concern criteria in step-down unit patients.


Subject(s)
Arrhythmias, Cardiac/diagnosis , Monitoring, Physiologic/instrumentation , Respiratory Insufficiency/diagnosis , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Blood Pressure Determination/methods , Critical Care/methods , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated/methods , Electrocardiography/methods , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Health Status Indicators , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Monitoring, Physiologic/methods , Oximetry/methods , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Prospective Studies , Respiration , Risk Assessment , Trauma Centers
8.
Crit Care Med ; 38(3): 963-70, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20124892

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Death statutes permit physicians to declare death on the basis of irreversible cessation of circulatory-respiratory or brain functions. The growing practice of organ donation after circulatory determination of death now requires physicians to exercise greater specificity in circulatory-respiratory death determination. We studied circulatory-respiratory death determination to clarify its concept, practice, and application to innovative circulatory determination of death protocols. RESULTS: It is ethically and legally appropriate to procure organs when permanent cessation (will not return) of circulation and respiration has occurred but before irreversible cessation (cannot return) has occurred because permanent cessation: 1) is an established medical practice standard for determining death; 2) is the meaning of "irreversible" in the Uniform Determination of Death Act; and 3) does not violate the "Dead Donor Rule." CONCLUSIONS: The use of unmodified extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in the circulatory determination of death donor after death is declared should be abandoned because, by restoring brain circulation, it retroactively negates the previous death determination. Modifications of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation that avoid this problem by excluding brain circulation are contrived, invasive, and, if used, should require consent of surrogates. Heart donation in circulatory determination of death is acceptable if proper standards are followed to declare donor death after establishing the permanent cessation of circulation. Pending additional data on "auto-resuscitation," we recommend that all circulatory determination of death programs should utilize the prevailing standard of 2 to 5 mins of demonstrated mechanical asystole before declaring death.


Subject(s)
Death , Ethics, Medical , Heart Arrest/diagnosis , Heart Transplantation/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Brain Death/legislation & jurisprudence , Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation , Heart Transplantation/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Tissue and Organ Procurement/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
12.
Crit Care ; 13(5): 313, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19825203

ABSTRACT

Up to 17% of hospital admissions are complicated by serious adverse events unrelated to the patients presenting medical condition. Rapid Response Teams (RRTs) review patients during early phase of deterioration to reduce patient morbidity and mortality. However, reports of the efficacy of these teams are varied. The aims of this article were to explore the concept of RRT dose, to assess whether RRT dose improves patient outcomes, and to assess whether there is evidence that inclusion of a physician in the team impacts on the effectiveness of the team. A review of available literature suggested that the method of reporting RRT utilization rate, (RRT dose) is calls per 1,000 admissions. Hospitals with mature RRTs that report improved patient outcome following RRT introduction have a RRT dose between 25.8 and 56.4 calls per 1,000 admissions. Four studies report an association between increasing RRT dose and reduced in-hospital cardiac arrest rates. Another reported that increasing RRT dose reduced in-hospital mortality for surgical but not medical patients. The MERIT study investigators reported a negative relationship between MET-like activity and the incidence of serious adverse events. Fourteen studies reported improved patient outcome in association with the introduction of a RRT, and 13/14 involved a Physician-led MET. These findings suggest that if the RRT is the major method for reviewing serious adverse events, the dose of RRT activation must be sufficient for the frequency and severity of the problem it is intended to treat. If the RRT dose is too low then it is unlikely to improve patient outcomes. Increasing RRT dose appears to be associated with reduction in cardiac arrests. The majority of studies reporting improved patient outcome in association with the introduction of an RRT involve a MET, suggesting that inclusion of a physician in the team is an important determinant of its effectiveness.


Subject(s)
Efficiency, Organizational , Emergency Service, Hospital , Hospital Rapid Response Team/standards , Hospital Rapid Response Team/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Quality of Health Care , Review Literature as Topic
13.
J Anesth ; 23(3): 403-8, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19685122

ABSTRACT

There is growing evidence that early detection and response to physiological deterioration can improve outcomes for hospitalized infants, children, and adults. A rapid response system (RRS) is a multidisciplinary system to decrease the incidence of in-hospital cardiopulmonary arrests by detecting a crisis event and triggering a response and by dispatching a responding team. For quality improvement of the system, a review mechanism is vital to identify opportunities for preventing future events or improving response after crises occur. The whole system requires an administrative component that oversees the RRS and provides support. The system is designed to locate and respond rapidly to a suddenly critically ill patient who lacks necessary critical care resources. Over the past decade, RRSs have been widely implemented in adult practice in the United States, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Scandinavian countries.


Subject(s)
Critical Care/organization & administration , Heart Arrest/therapy , Patient Care Team/organization & administration , Adult , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation , Child , Child, Preschool , Guideline Adherence , Guidelines as Topic , Humans , Infant , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Treatment Outcome
14.
Crit Care Clin ; 35(4): 717-725, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31445616

ABSTRACT

Emergency and critical care medicine are fraught with ethically challenging decision making for clinicians, patients, and families. Time and resource constraints, decisional-impaired patients, and emotionally overwhelmed family members make obtaining informed consent, discussing withholding or withdrawing of life-sustaining treatments, and respecting patient values and preferences difficult. When illness or trauma is secondary to disaster, ethical considerations increase and change based on number of casualties, type of disaster, and anticipated life cycle of the crisis. This article considers the ethical issues that arise when health providers are confronted with the challenges of caring for victims of disaster.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine/ethics , Disasters , Health Priorities/ethics , Critical Care/ethics , Disaster Planning , Humans , Moral Obligations , Triage/ethics
15.
Resuscitation ; 141: 1-12, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31129229

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Clinically significant deterioration of patients admitted to general wards is a recognized complication of hospital care. Rapid Response Systems (RRS) aim to reduce the number of avoidable adverse events. The authors aimed to develop a core quality metric for the evaluation of RRS. METHODS: We conducted an international consensus process. Participants included patients, carers, clinicians, research scientists, and members of the International Society for Rapid Response Systems with representatives from Europe, Australia, Africa, Asia and the US. Scoping reviews of the literature identified potential metrics. We used a modified Delphi methodology to arrive at a list of candidate indicators that were reviewed for feasibility and applicability across a broad range of healthcare systems including low and middle-income countries. The writing group refined recommendations and further characterized measurement tools. RESULTS: Consensus emerged that core outcomes for reporting for quality improvement should include ten metrics related to structure, process and outcome for RRS with outcomes following the domains of the quadruple aim. The conference recommended that hospitals should collect data on cardiac arrests and their potential predictability, timeliness of escalation, critical care interventions and presence of written treatment goals for patients remaining on general wards. Unit level reporting should include the presence of patient activated rapid response and metrics of organizational culture. We suggest two exploratory cost metrics to underpin urgently needed research in this area. CONCLUSION: A consensus process was used to develop ten metrics for better understanding the course and care of deteriorating ward patients. Others are proposed for further development.


Subject(s)
Clinical Deterioration , Heart Arrest/therapy , Hospital Rapid Response Team , Quality Assurance, Health Care/methods , Critical Care/standards , Humans , Practice Guidelines as Topic
16.
Resuscitation ; 79(2): 198-204, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18951113

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Therapeutic hypothermia (TH) improves outcomes in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest. Few hospitals have protocol-driven plans that include TH. We implemented a series of process interventions designed to increase TH use and improve outcomes in patients successfully resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) or in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA). METHODS AND RESULTS: Linked interventions including a TH order sheet, verbal and written feedback to individual providers, an educational program, TH "kit" and on-call consultants to assist with patient care and hypothermia induction were implemented between January 1, 2005 and December 31, 2007 in a large, university-affiliated, tertiary care center. We then completed a retrospective review of all patients treated for cardiac arrest during the study period. Descriptive statistics, chi-squared analyses, or Fisher's exact test were used as appropriate. A p value <0.05 was considered significant. 135 OHCA patients and 106 IHCA patients were eligible for post-arrest care. TH use increased each year in the OHCA group (from 6% to 65% to 76%; p<0.001) and IHCA group (from 0% to 36% to 53%; p=.02). A good outcome was achieved in 21% and 8% of comatose patients with OHCA and IHCA, respectively. Patients with OHCA and ventricular dysrhythmia were more likely to have a good outcome with TH treatment than without it (good outcome in 57% vs. 8%; p=.005). CONCLUSION: Implementing a series of aggressive interventions increased appropriate TH use and was associated with improved outcomes in our facility.


Subject(s)
Coma/therapy , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Heart Arrest/therapy , Hypothermia, Induced , Resuscitation , Adult , Aged , Clinical Protocols , Cohort Studies , Female , Heart Arrest/psychology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Retrospective Studies
17.
Ann Intern Med ; 147(12): 876-9, 2007 Dec 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18087059

ABSTRACT

In 2006, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws rewrote the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act. To overcome the problem of family members prohibiting organ donation from their deceased loved ones even when a donor card existed, the commissioners modified the act to prevent end-of-life care from precluding organ donation. An unintended consequence of the new wording creates the potential for end-of-life care that prioritizes care of the potential donor organs over care and comfort of the dying person. The commissioners have now revised the act, but the original version has already been legislated in many states, with others poised to follow. To protect dying patients' wishes about their end-of-life care, states that have legislated or are considering the original act must replace it with the revised version. A long-term and important ethical precept must stand: Care of dying patients takes precedence over organs. Another laudable goal must be promoted as well: Organ donation is an important part of end-of-life care.


Subject(s)
Terminal Care/ethics , Tissue Donors/ethics , Tissue Donors/legislation & jurisprudence , Family , Humans , Terminal Care/standards , Tissue and Organ Procurement , United States
18.
Crit Care Clin ; 34(2): 199-207, 2018 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29482900

ABSTRACT

Electronic medical records can be used to mine clinical data (big data), providing automated analysis during patient care. This article describes the source and potential impact of big data analysis on risk stratification and early detection of deterioration. It compares use of big data analysis with existing methods of identifying at-risk patients who require rapid response. Aggregate weighted scoring systems combined with big data analysis offer an opportunity to detect clinical changes that precede rapid response team activation. Future studies must determine if this will decrease transfers to intensive care units and cardiac arrests on the floors.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Heart Arrest/diagnosis , Hospital Rapid Response Team/organization & administration , Risk Assessment/methods , Statistics as Topic/methods , Vital Signs/physiology , Humans
20.
Respir Care ; 52(3): 263-70, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17328824

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The respiratory care department of one campus within our health system evaluated simulation-based medical education for training and competency evaluation of the mini bronchoalveolar lavage (mini-BAL) procedure, with an emphasis on patient safety and procedure performance standards. METHODS: Training and competency evaluation occurred in 4 phases. In phase one, 24 staff respiratory therapists (RTs) were randomly chosen and individually underwent a simulation-based test of their mini-BAL performance, using a patient-simulator mannequin. Their performance on this test reflected the effectiveness of traditional training methods. In phase two, 83 staff RTs were given unlimited access to a Web-based curriculum on mini-BAL, including a video of a mini-BAL. They then took 2 tests: one online Web-based test, then a patient-simulator test. In phase three, the same 83 RTs attended a workshop that used the patient simulator for training and practice, then were re-evaluated with the patient-simulator test. Phase four was another simulator-based re-evaluation, 90 days after phase three, to study skills retention. RESULTS: The mean scores were: phase one 73 +/- 10%, phase two 77 +/- 11%, phase three 95 +/- 5% (p < 0.01), phase four 92 +/- 8%. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that employing simulation technology within a comprehensive departmental program can enhance staff training.


Subject(s)
Bronchoalveolar Lavage/nursing , Clinical Competence , Health Personnel/education , Inservice Training/methods , Respiratory Care Units , Humans , Pennsylvania
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