4.1 Article

Struggling to do what is right for the child: Pediatric life-support decisions among physicians and nurses in France and Quebec

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD HEALTH CARE
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 109-123

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1367493511420184

Keywords

decision-making; ethics; life-sustaining therapies; nurses; pediatric critical care; physicians

Funding

  1. McGill University
  2. McGill University Health Centre

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This study examined (a) how physicians and nurses in France and Quebec make decisions about life-sustaining therapies (LSTs) for critically ill children and (b) corresponding ethical challenges. A focus groups design was used. A total of 21 physicians and 24 nurses participated (plus 9 physicians and 13 nurses from a prior secondary analysis). Principal differences related to roles: French participants regarded physicians as responsible for LST decisions, whereas Quebec participants recognized parents as formal decision-makers. Physicians stated they welcomed nurses' input but found they often did not participate, while nurses said they wanted to contribute but felt excluded. The LST limitations were based on conditions resulting in long-term consequences, irreversibility, continued deterioration, inability to engage in relationships and loss of autonomy. Ethical challenges related to: the fear of making errors in the face of uncertainty; struggling with patient/family consequences of one's actions; questioning the parental role and dealing with relational difficulties between physicians and nurses.

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