A Descriptive Study of Decision-Making Conversations during Pediatric Intensive Care Unit Family Conferences.

2018
https://researcherprofiles.org/profile/464418280
29920145
Smith MA, Clayman ML, Frader J, Arenson M, Haber-Barker N, Ryan C, Emanuel L, Michelson K
Abstract

BACKGROUND

Little is known about how decision-making conversations occur during pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) family conferences (FCs).

OBJECTIVE

Describe the decision-making process and implementation of shared decision making (SDM) during PICU FCs.

DESIGN

Observational study.

SETTING/SUBJECTS

University-based tertiary care PICU, including 31 parents and 94 PICU healthcare professionals involved in FCs.

MEASUREMENTS

We recorded, transcribed, and analyzed 14 PICU FCs involving decision-making discussions. We used a modified grounded theory and content analysis approach to explore the use of traditionally described stages of decision making (DM) (information exchange, deliberation, and determining a plan). We also identified the presence or absence of predefined SDM elements.

RESULTS

DM involved the following modified stages: information exchange; information-oriented deliberation; plan-oriented deliberation; and determining a plan. Conversations progressed through stages in a nonlinear manner. For the main decision discussed, all conferences included a presentation of the clinical issues, treatment alternatives, and uncertainty. A minority of FCs included assessing the family's understanding (21%), assessing the family's need for input from others (28%), exploring the family's desired decision-making role (35%), and eliciting the family's opinion (42%).

CONCLUSIONS

In the FCs studied, we found that DM is a nonlinear process. We also found that several SDM elements that could provide information about parents' perspectives and needs did not always occur, identifying areas for process improvement.

Journal Issue
Volume 21 of Issue 9