BMJ Open (Sep 2021)

Life or limb: an international qualitative study on decision making in sarcoma surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Peter F M Choong,
  • Michelle M Dowsey,
  • Samantha Bunzli,
  • Michelle Ghert,
  • Ajay Puri,
  • Robert Turcotte,
  • Penny O'Brien,
  • Peter Rose,
  • Will Aston,
  • Miguel A Ayerza,
  • Lester Chan,
  • Stephane Cherix,
  • Jorge de las Heras,
  • Davide Donati,
  • Uwale Eyesan,
  • Nicola Fabbri,
  • Thomas Hilton,
  • Oluwaseyi Kayode Idowu,
  • Jungo Imanishi,
  • Dundar Sabah,
  • Kristy Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047175
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9

Abstract

Read online

Objectives The COVID-19 pandemic is unprecedented as a global crisis over the last century. How do specialist surgeons make decisions about patient care in these unprecedent times?Design Between April and May 2020, we conducted an international qualitative study. Sarcoma surgeons from diverse global settings participated in 60 min interviews exploring surgical decision making during COVID-19. Interview data were analysed using an inductive thematic analysis approach.Setting Participants represented public and private hospitals in 14 countries, in different phases of the first wave of the pandemic: Australia, Argentina, Canada, India, Italy, Japan, Nigeria, Singapore, Spain, South Africa, Switzerland, Turkey, UK and USA.Participants From 22 invited sarcoma surgeons, 18 surgeons participated. Participants had an average of 19 years experience as a sarcoma surgeon.Results 17/18 participants described a decision they had made about patient care since the start of the pandemic that was unique to them, that is, without precedence. Common to ‘unique’ decisions about patient care was uncertainty about what was going on and what would happen in the future (theme 1: the context of uncertainty), the impact of the pandemic on resources or threat of the pandemic to overwhelm resources (theme 2: limited resources), perceived increased risk to self (theme 3: duty of care) and least-worst decision making, in which none of the options were perceived as ideal and participants settled on the least-worst option at that point in time (theme 4: least-worst decision making).Conclusions In the context of rapidly changing standards of justice and beneficence in patient care, traditional decision-making frameworks may no longer apply. Based on the experiences of surgeons in this study, we describe a framework of least-worst decision making. This framework gives rise to actionable strategies that can support decision making in sarcoma and other specialised fields of surgery, both during the current crisis and beyond.