医学
围手术期
心肺复苏术
主题分析
麻醉学
梅德林
重症监护医学
人口
复苏
定性研究
医疗急救
急诊医学
精神科
外科
政治学
法学
社会科学
环境卫生
社会学
作者
Matthew B. Allen,Amanda J. Reich,Patrick Collins,Karen Chahal,Maria Moustaqim-Barrette,Rachelle Bernacki,Zara Cooper,Angela M. Bader
标识
DOI:10.1097/sla.0000000000006214
摘要
Objective: To characterize the perceptions of surgeons, anesthesiologists, and geriatricians regarding perioperative CPR in surgical patients with frailty. Summary Background Data: The population of patients undergoing surgery is growing older and more frail. Despite a growing focus on goal-concordant care, frailty assessment, and debate regarding the appropriateness of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in patients with frailty, providers’ views regarding frailty and perioperative CPR are unknown. Methods: We performed qualitative thematic analysis of transcripts from semi-structured interviews of anesthesiologists (8), surgeons (10), and geriatricians (9) who care for high-risk surgical patients at two academic medical centers in Boston, MA. The interview guide elicited clinicians’ understanding of frailty, approach to decision-making regarding perioperative CPR, and perceptions of perioperative CPR in frail surgical patients. Results: We identified 5 themes: perceptions of perioperative CPR in patients with frailty vary by provider specialty; judgments regarding appropriateness of CPR in surgical patients with frailty are typically multifactorial and include patient goals, age, comorbidities, and arrest etiology; resuscitation in patients with frailty is sometimes associated with moral distress; biases such as ableism and ageism may skew clinicians’ perceptions of appropriateness of perioperative CPR in patients with frailty; and evidence to guide risk stratification for patients with frailty undergoing perioperative CPR is inadequate. Conclusions: Anesthesiologists, surgeons, and geriatricians offer different accounts of frailty’s relevance to judgments regarding CPR in surgical patients. Divergent views regarding frailty and perioperative CPR may impede efforts to deliver goal-concordant care and suggest a need for research to inform risk stratification, predict patient-centered outcomes, and understand the role of potential biases such as ageism and ableism.
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