Audio-Digest Foundation: general-surgery

Main Written Summaries Listing | General-surgery: 2005 Listings
Audio-Digest FoundationGeneral Surgery


Volume 52, Issue 17
September 7, 2005

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit:

View Main Program Listing

Visit Audio-Digest Home Page

General Surgery Program InfoAccreditation InfoCultural & Linguistic Competency Resources





DNR ORDERS

From the 10th Annual Hepato-Biliary Update, sponsored by the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Glenn J. Treisman, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, and Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore

Case: 60-yr-old man with known renal cell cancer; after nephrectomy, oncologist told patient cancer metastatic and that patient should make arrangements for his death; patient retired but continued to work as hobby; 2 yr after nephrectomy, patient stopped working abruptly (September), which was out of character for him; daughter visited him in October and found house in disarray; patient promised to do better; patient admitted for dehydration in November and readmitted in December; entered nursing home in January; diagnosed with depression in February and started on paroxetine (Paxil); stopped walking in March; became incontinent in April; referred to geriatric outpatient service for dementia in May; had evaluation in June, and tests ordered; none of tests performed because patient had elaborate do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order and physicians decided patient with DNR order did not need tests; in July, daughter had father admitted to hospital for evaluation of dementia
Speaker’s interaction: resident requested speaker’s signature on DNR order before seeing patient, insisting that nurses wanted it done right away; speaker asked to review case, examine patient, then sign orders; patient’s score on Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) was 11 (30 normal); patient could barely answer questions; patient demonstrated that he wanted to walk but did not know what to do; patient incontinent; triad of incontinence, subcortical dementia, and apractic gait suggests normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH); neurology and medicine consultations, tests, computed tomography (CT) of head, and laboratory tests ordered; digitalis level 2.6 ng/mL, and creatinine 2.6 mg/dL; hydration reduced creatinine and digitalis levels and increased MMSE score by 2 points; next morning, medicine resident delivers lecture on medical futility, and neurology resident cancels order for head CT; CT finally obtained; patient has enlarged ventricles and all signs of NPH; speaker orders large-volume lumbar puncture (LP) and neurologic consultation; resident tells speaker later that day that large-volume LP not done because patient not competent and advance directive forbids invasive procedures; speaker argued LP minimally invasive and advises call to daughter for permission; after second large-volume LP, patient got up and walked 2 steps, and MMSE score went up to 14; patient clearly looked better for 2 to 3 days; neurologist confirmed diagnosis of NPH; speaker ordered shunt, but advance directive did not address this particular circumstance; neurosurgery said shunt would require court order because no provision in advance directive about this procedure; patient waited 40 days while legal issues debated; finally, daughter threatened lawsuit if shunt not placed; patient eventually walked out of hospital and lived independently at home for several years; he eventually died of heart disease
Medical decision making: like any medical intervention, do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders have risks, benefits, therapeutic effects, and side effects; must weigh advantages and disadvantages of procedures; doctor-patient relationship has unequal balance of power (physician has all power, patient has none); this type of relationship can exist only if patient’s interests put first by physician (can be corrupted by physician and by outside social and financial pressures)
DNR orders at Johns Hopkins: DNR orders first appeared in medical records in 1976, but policy not adopted until 1982; first major incident occurred in 1984 when hyperalimentation discontinued on patient without physician’s order because hyperalimentation team determined patients with DNR orders should not receive hyperalimentation; patient’s physician complained, and decision made that physician in charge of patient should decide; in 1988, medical board told that in patients with AIDS, house staff sees DNR orders as sign to do nothing, vs everything if no DNR order exists; suggestion that DNR orders should not guide rest of case; living wills initiated by physician thought to be better approach; in 1989, DNR policy clarified to say that codes are all or none; in 1990, patient with brisk gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding taken to GI suite, only to be returned without treatment because clinicians saw DNR order and determined if patient stopped breathing during sedation, they could not resuscitate him; ultimately decided that patients with DNR orders can be resuscitated if accidentally killed with too much sedation
Scope of problem: patients with terminal cancer who are dying should not be given chest compressions when they stop breathing, but who decides and how is decision made? ambulance crew cannot decide, because they are not physicians; unless DNR order exists, crew must attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on elderly nursing home patient found not breathing; American College of Physicians ethics manual says DNR order should not affect any other aspect of patient’s care; DNR order meant only to prevent patient known to be dying from receiving chest compressions, but in practice, it entirely changes way medical system relates to patient; literature—3500 papers published on subject of DNR orders, but only 100 have data on risks and benefits
Why DNR orders exist: 25-yr-old woman, Nancy Cruzan, in car accident that left her in persistent vegetative state; family sought cessation of tube feedings; hospital refused without court order; Supreme Court ruled in favor of state, saying incompetent patient must have left clear and convincing evidence of her preferences to be deprived of food and water; hailed as tremendous victory by state of Missouri and by right-to-death advocates who said, “if you have left clear and convincing evidence, you can ask your doctor to do anything,” and that patient autonomy most important consideration
1991 patient self-determination act: resulted from Cruzan case; requires all patients to be advised about advance directives and legal rights to self-determination of health care (did not say how, just that it had to be done); “it’s the ways in which these [laws] affect our practice that are being given little consideration”; DNR orders help most when physician already knows what to do, and interfere in cases when best course of treatment for patient unclear; patients’ interests and values when competent may be different from those they have when advance directives implemented
Advance directives in life-sustaining care (1971 study): 175 patients in large nursing home had advance directives written; physicians ignored advance directives 25% of time and followed them 75% of time; when advance directives ignored, physicians did less than what advance directives said in 25% of cases, more in 25% of cases, and 50% of time directive ignored because patients changed their mind; majority of time, physicians did less than called for by advance directives “because it was silly”; family of incompetent patients wanted treatment withheld more often than competent patients in similar situations; family members and physicians do not know what patients want without consulting patient directly; patients change their mind, depending on many factors, many of which have nothing to do with their illness (eg, weather, what’s happening with their friends, how recently they have eaten, mood, health of spouse); patients suffering from depression want interventions withheld but want interventions performed when depression treated; patients whose depression scores did not change nevertheless changed their choices regularly and sometimes randomly (advance directive form so detailed that difficult to fill it out same way twice); incompetent patient’s best interests should take precedence over most thoughtful choices patient made when competent (Wolfe et al, 1991)
Patients close to death: frail elderly people with severe illness were asked how much time of their remaining days would they give up if they could be completely healthy; numbers surprisingly low (10%, 20%, many said none); “people, when they do these advance directives, don’t know how it’s going to be when they’re sick, and they also don’t know how it’s going to be when you get them well”
Atkinson study (1994): Active Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) score predicted 137 patients certain to die; treated all; 131 died in 2 days, 6 survived; cost $250,000 per survivor; save most money by letting patients die who have 50/50 chance of survival; not much money saved by treating all patients in certain-to-die group where only 5% survive
Outside pressure: husband of patient in persistent vegetative state pressured by clergy and health care professionals to take wife off ventilator because room needed for other patients; wife eventually recovered (not expected); “we have those cases, and you will be pressured in those cases to stop treatment”; family members morally required to make best decision based on what’s best for all concerned, not simply what is best for themselves; many times, family members have greater interest than patient in which treatment option exercised, eg, patient who requires much care by family; in such cases, interests of family may override those of patient; physicians need to hold interests of patient above those of family members, sometimes making them unpopular with family; case example; “sometimes you have to fight to do what’s best for your patient”
Euthanasia: 1996 Lancet study (data gathered in previous 4 yr)—surveyed oncologists, their patients, and general public; showed 23% of physicians and 66% of public think it permissible to kill patient with unremitting pain; 15% of physicians and 50% of public and patients thought euthanasia permissible if patient burden on family; 6% of physicians and 33% of public and patients think euthanasia acceptable for patients with functional disability; patients with cancer and severe pain, and those who are religious less likely to endorse assisted suicide and euthanasia; 20% of patients and 25% of public said they would change physicians if they discovered their physician had provided such services; patients with worst prognosis were least likely to endorse assisted suicide and euthanasia, and most likely to say they would change physicians if they discovered their physician had provided such services; in telephone survey, people who would consider assisted suicide and euthanasia are those who screen positive for depression; 2% of oncologists admitted on telephone that they had killed patient, and 20% admitted assisting patient with suicide; nonpsychiatric physicians may allow life-ending interventions when treatment of depression may be more appropriate
The Netherlands: physicians not prosecuted for euthanasia and assisted suicide if they follow guidelines, ie, 1) patient must repeatedly and explicitly request it, 2) there has to be severe physical or mental suffering with no prospect of relief, 3) decision must be well-informed, free, and enduring, 4) all alternatives must have been exhausted or refused by patient, 5) another physician has to be consulted, 6) physician must record course of events; under second guideline, depression acceptable reason for assisted suicide or euthanasia; in late 1980s, 5% of deaths in Netherlands either assisted suicide or euthanasia; of deaths due to euthanasia (2%), 50% not requested by patients, but physicians claim to know patients would have wanted to die if they had been able to speak; however, many papers show physicians and family members do not know what patients want without consulting them
Slippery slope: patients can refuse any intervention; discontinuation of heroic life support; physician-assisted suicide; voluntary or involuntary euthanasia is over the line, “and that’s where we are in Oregon and the Netherlands”; data show overwhelmingly that advance directives and DNR orders decrease hospital costs, so there is subtle economic pressure on physicians to use these interventions; physicians must weigh risk and benefit for their patients; Nazi holocaust—started with psychiatrists killing mentally ill patients because they had no one to defend them; then killing of Jews, gypsies, and other “defectives” began; modern-day victims are demented elderly patients and psychiatrically ill HIV patients (their treatment being rationed to save money); physicians who ran Nazi killing centers allowed to sign charts with pseudonym; “don’t do anything in medicine that requires you to lie about your name”
Conclusion: DNR orders have intended and unintended consequences that were not foreseen when they were established; one consequence is decreased intensity of care; most patients do not understand what DNR orders mean; decisions about future medical care affected by patient’s state of mind, unlikely to be enduring, and not shown to be superior to physician’s good judgment; DNR orders have broader implications than simply sparing chest compressions (impact cost of care, burden physicians, cause discomfort to loved ones; these factors can corrupt their use); enduring doctor-patient relationship where doctor and patient work together to make end-of-life decisions is current standard of care that is being eroded by today’s delivery system (“knowing someone for lifetime allows you to advocate for them; knowing someone for 8 min, on call, doesn’t allow you to know much about anything”); physician must advocate for patient’s best interest; speaker not opposed to DNR orders, but opposed to their thoughtless application and their insinuation into medical armamentarium with little consideration about their potential risks; “if it was me, I would rather have anybody in this room, no matter how postmodern a doctor you are, make the decision than have it made by a piece of paper that I signed not knowing what I was doing”

Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to educate the listener about do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders and advance directives. After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Summarize the history of DNR orders.
2. Describe the Nancy Cruzan case and the law that was established as a result.
3. Cite the opinions of patients who are close to death about end-of-life choices.
4. Describe a case that illustrates a physician receiving outside pressure to discontinue therapy for a dying patient for financial or political reasons.
5. Give a summary of the side effects DNR orders can have on a patient’s care.

Suggested Reading

Applebaum GE et al: The outcome of CPR initiated in nursing homes. J Am Geriatr Soc 38:197, 1990; Atkinson S et al: Identification of futility in intensive care. Lancet 344:1203, 1994; Blackhall LJ: Must we always use CPR? N Engl J Med 317:1281, 1987; Danis M et al: A prospective study of advance directives for life-sustaining care. N Engl J Med 324:882, 1991; Death and dignity: the case of Diane. N Engl J Med 325:658, 1991; Emanuel LL et al: Advance directives for medical care--a case for greater use. N Engl J Med 324:889, 1991; Fallat ME et al: Do-not-resuscitate orders for pediatric patients who require anesthesia and surgery. Pediatrics 114:1686, 2004; McCrary SV et al: Hospital policy on advance directives. Do institutions ask patients about living wills? JAMA 262:2411, 1989; Postovsky S et al: "Do not resuscitate" orders among children with solid tumors at the end of life. Pediatr Hematol Oncol 21:661, 2004; U.S. Supreme Court: Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health. Wests Supreme Court Report 110:2841, 1990; Vanpee D et al: Scale of levels of care versus DNR orders. J Med Ethics 30:351, 2004; Wolfe J et al: Symptoms and suffering at the end of life in children with cancer. N Engl J Med 342:326, 2000.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME guidelines, the Audio-Digest Foundation requests all lecturers to disclose any significant financial relationship with the manufacturer or provider of any commercial product or service discussed. For this issue, the faculty reported nothing to disclose.


Dr. Treisman was recorded September 11, 2004, in Cambridge, Maryland, at the 10th Annual Hepato-Bilary Update, sponsored by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks Dr. Treisman and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine for their cooperation in the production of this program.


Reproduction of this summary in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit:

View Main Program Listing

Visit Audio-Digest Home Page