4.3 Article

Medical education and law: withholding/withdrawing treatment from adults without capacity

期刊

INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL
卷 45, 期 6, 页码 634-640

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imj.12759

关键词

education; medical; terminal care; medical law; withholding treatment; decision-making

资金

  1. Australian Research Council [LP0990329]
  2. Office of the Public Advocate (Vic)
  3. Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal
  4. New South Wales Civil and Administrative Tribunal
  5. Public Guardian (NSW)
  6. Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal
  7. Office of the Public Guardian (Qld)
  8. Office of the Public Advocate (Qld)
  9. Australian Research Council [LP0990329] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

BackgroundLaw is increasingly involved in clinical practice, particularly at the end of life, but undergraduate and postgraduate education in this area remains unsystematic. We hypothesised that attitudes to and knowledge of the law governing withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatment from adults without capacity (the WWLST law) would vary and demonstrate deficiencies among medical specialists. AimsWe investigated perspectives, knowledge and training of medical specialists in the three largest (populations and medical workforces) Australian states, concerning the WWLST law. MethodsFollowing expert legal review, specialist focus groups, pre-testing and piloting in each state, seven specialties involved with end-of-life care were surveyed, with a variety of statistical analyses applied to the responses. ResultsRespondents supported the need to know and follow the law. There were mixed views about its helpfulness in medical decision-making. Over half the respondents conceded poor knowledge of the law; this was mirrored by critical gaps in knowledge that varied by specialty. There were relatively low but increasing rates of education from the undergraduate to continuing professional development (CPD) stages. Mean knowledge score did not vary significantly according to undergraduate or immediate postgraduate training, but CPD training, particularly if recent, resulted in greater knowledge. Case-based workshops were the preferred CPD instruction method. ConclusionsTeaching of current and evolving law should be strengthened across all stages of medical education. This should improve understanding of the role of law, ameliorate ambivalence towards the law and contribute to more informed deliberation about end-of-life issues with patients and families.

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