Autonomy and Abandonment - Legal and Moral Implications

Advance Health Directive:

Patient has an advanced health directive, witnessed, notarized and in the format of a legal document done by his attorney, rejecting treatment if he has a terminal condition with the probability of death within a few months; and/or an irreversible condition requiring artificial life support. Patient’s daughter is designated as surrogate. The document is notarized.
This 84 year old man is admitted for pneumonia; dementia; depression; anemia; malnutrition; renal failure, and hypernaturemia.

History: Dysphasia, anorexia, ataxia, poor intake, altered level of consciousness, restless, hypotensive, shortness of breath, bilateral rales. He is unable to give any history himself.

Admitting: Diagnosis: Acute pneumonia on top of interstitial lung disease and bronchiectasis.
The patient is intubated and noted to have renal failure, thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis, anemia, and deteriorating mental condition.

Patient’s daughter advises that her father never wanted to be maintained on artificial life support. Options are discussed with daughter, who requests that a do not resuscitate order be instituted.
Daughter advises bioethics consultant that she is waiting to hear from doctors regarding their opinion as to whether or not the pulmonary condition is irreversible, as described in the advance health directive. If so she wants to refuse continued artificial ventilation. Pending the receipt of that information she requests that no tracheostomy be performed. She insists that the patient not be sent to a skilled nursing facility.

Nevertheless, it is recommended, and the daughter consents to a tracheostomy. Daughter has not, however, been told any opinion as to irreversibility of respiratory failure. Attempt at weaning is ordered and patient is extubated. He deteriorates and is reintubated the same day. Pulmonologist, without consulting patient's daughter, writes order that patient be transferred to a skilled nursing facility.

Daughter is advised by nurse about the transfer order and refuses transfer. She reiterates that her father would not want to live in a skilled nursing facility on artificial life support. Under these circumstances he would reject continued artificial ventilation. Daughter says she does not want futile care. Patient’s daughter, and bioethics consult request a meeting with pulmonologist. There is no response from pulmonologist, one-way or the other.

The pulmonologist ceases to participate in case without any discussion with daughter. Daughter requests and signs withdrawal of artificial ventilation form. Three days later the daughter is notified that her father has been extubated and transferred to a skilled nursing facility. She, however, is unable to locate her father at that facility and is told that her father "never arrived." She calls the hospital and is told that he is no longer a patient at that hospital. She thereafter discovers, through the nursing administration office, that her father has died and that his body has been in the hospital's morgue for 3 days.

Comments:

1.    Physicians as well as patients and family often have difficulty withdrawing life-sustaining treatment. The daughter never received an answer as to the probability of death or of the irreversibility of the patient’s condition - the criteria set forth in the advance health directive. Her decisions were not informed.She felt abandoned by the pulmonologist who seemed to "just disappear."


2.    There is no obligation for a physician to treat a patient in a way that is contrary to the physician’s conscience. A physician does have the obligation, however, to inform a patient, or if necessary a surrogate decision maker, as to the diagnosis and prognosis, including risks of treatment and of non treatment. Before signing off the case the pulmonologist, should have and easily could have advised the daughter that he was withdrawing from the case and discuss options, which should have included arranging for a new pulmonologist on the case.


3.    There is reluctance on the part of many physicians to discuss end of life care and options. An Institute of Medicine study on improving care at the end of life found that there is often:
a) Overuse of care that is inconsistent with patient preferences and prognosis;
b) Underuse of care to treat symptoms;
             c) Untimely referral to hospice;
             d) Poor palliative care;
             e) Poor communication regarding prognosis and treatment preferences.

In a cohort study of 1573 patients, prolonged ventilation was not generally discussed:
         12% of patients discussed preferences with their physicians,
         20% said that they wanted it,
         80% said that they did not want it.
Annals of Internal Medicine: 1 July 1997 | Volume 127 Issue 1 | Pages 1-12

4.    After withdrawal or withholding artificial life support, the need for palliative care must be conscientiously provided to patient and/or surrogate decision makers. Responsibility for patient care does not end with a decision to withdraw artificial life support.

5.    Support for family members should continue. This case illustrates that physicians can lose interest in a patient after a decision to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining treatment.  In this instance this may have contributed to the failure to maintain a line of communication with this patient’s daughter, including advising her of her father’s death.


 

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