Critical Care Explorations (Aug 2021)

Defining Familial Interactions and Networks: An Exploratory Qualitative Study on Family Networks and Surrogate Decision-Making

  • Sarah V. Harvey, MD,
  • Adam Y. Adenwala, MD,
  • Meghan B. Lane-Fall, MD, MSHP, FCCM

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 8
p. e0504

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES:. To characterize patient preferences for medical surrogate decision-makers in the ICU to capture the complexity of decision-making preferences and highlight potential conflicts between patients’ preferences and clinicians’ surrogate decision-maker identification in usual clinical practice. DESIGN:. Prospective qualitative cross-sectional study. SETTING:. Two ICUs in a quaternary referral center in the eastern United States. PATIENTS:. Convenience sample of patients admitted to the ICU and their family members. INTERVENTION:. None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:. Twenty-six patient-family-clinician units were interviewed. Men were three times more likely than women to have a legally appointed decision-maker that matched their preferred decision-maker as expressed in the interview. Patients who were married or in a long-term relationship were the most consistent group of respondents, with 94% of them selecting their spouse or partner as the preferred decision-maker. The most common reasons for selecting a surrogate decision-maker were intangible themes such as feeling “known” by that person rather than having prior discussions about specific wishes or advance directives. CONCLUSIONS:. Asking about a patient’s familial network and qualities they value in a surrogate decision-maker may aid ICU teams in honoring patients’ wishes for surrogate decision-making. This may be an important supplement to accepted legal hierarchies for proxy decision-makers and advance directive documents. Further studies with larger sample sizes could be used to shed light on the nuances of familial and relationship networks of a more diverse population of respondents.