Given how central Substitute Decision Makers (SDMs) are to the process leading to end of life decisions and sometimes, organ donation, it is striking how poorly understood this decision-making process is. A 2017 scoping review on the topic of soliciting SDM consent to organ donation reported on more than 168 studies covering a broad range of topics, including: SDM characteristics and predictors of consent; the process of soliciting consent; and the effect of the decision on subsequent process of care and on family well-being. An unexplored area, however, is factors - including modifiable factors - that influence SDM decision making at the end of life, which organ donation is part of, such as: responses to stress, support from extended families and friends, and personal beliefs about the ongoing medical conditions. This project seeks to fill this clear and important gap. In the ICU, at the end of life, SDMs are under incredible emotional distress, have often not eaten or slept properly for days preceding discussions about end of life and organ donation, and are also in the midst of grieving for their loved one. The time pressure poses challenges for SDMs' decision making. Thus, this study will investigate novel, potentially modifiable reasons for end of life decision so that we may better support this personally challenging and important decision, especially if organ donation decision interferes with the decision process. Primary objective: To investigate beliefs and experiences of SDMs involved in the decision-making process around withdrawal of life sustaining therapies . Secondary objective: To inform efforts to improve support for SDMs with the aim of improving the decision-making process end-of-life decisions, including when organ donation is involved.
A national multicenter multi-methods study with SDMs will be conducted in two steps. In Step 1, a semi-structured interviews with SDMs will be conducted. The sampling frame will balance interviews with those that were approached or not for organ donation, and consented or not to organ donation. Interviews will be informed by two complementary theoretical frameworks. Building on Step 1 results, in Step 2 a national telephone survey of SDMs will be conducted to test which factors are associated with end-of-life decisions.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
292
1. Cover SDMs' experience around: * withdrawal of life sustaining therapies * organ donation among those who were approached (including with the medical team and the organ donation organisation) * understanding of the situation * views on any gaps in the quantity or quality of information and discussion they received concerning their loved one's end-of-life care or donation process 2. Explore factors they perceived to influence their decision to consent to organ donation or not (or that would have influenced their decision for those not approached), and how such factors may have changed over the course of making this decision and since the decision (or since the event for those not approached).
Explore SDM's beliefs and experiences around end of life and assess which beliefs are associated with the decision taken at the end of life, including decision to donate organs or not (and the strength of this association)
Foothills Medical Centre
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Hamilton General Hospital
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
London Health Sciences Centre
London, Ontario, Canada
The Ottawa Hospital
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
CHU de Québec - Université Laval
Québec, Quebec, Canada
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
SDM's beliefs and experiences around end of life
Assess which beliefs and experiences are associated with the decision to donate organs using open-ended questions. The responses obtained from the interviews will be analysed and classified based on the Leventhal's Common Sense Self-Regulation Model and the theoretical domain Framework. The most significant domains will help inform the creation of a larger scale national survey to help investigate what domains affect decision-making around end of life.
Time frame: 6 weeks to 2 months after patient's hospitalisation in the intensive care unit
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