Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment affects 10-15% of ICU patients, including those with severe acute brain injury, whose care appears futile in terms of prognosis based on clinical and paraclinical data, expected quality of life, patient preferences, age, or reduced quality of life. There are few studies on withholding treatment compared with withdrawing treatment, and even fewer on survivors after a decision to withhold treatment. Quality of life is defined by WHO as "an individual's perception of his or her position in life in the context of the culture and value systems in which he or she lives and in relation to his or her goals, expectations, standards and concerns". The relationship between quality of life and neurological outcome after severe acute brain injury is controversial and therefore difficult to predict. That's why the investigators question the legitimacy of making decisions to withhold treatment from patients with severe acute brain injury based on their expected quality of life, when this prediction is uncertain.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
14
Record analysis of the post-ICU follow-up with the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne
Saint-Etienne, France
RECRUITINGInterpretative Phenomenological Analysis
Qualitative analysis of the quality of life in patients with severe acute brain injury and with withholding of life-sustaining treatment
Time frame: 24 months after ICU discharge
International survey among neurointensivists from ANARLF network - questionnaires
Comparison of the number of decisions of withholding treatment in the clinical cases versus real life
Time frame: Month : 3
International survey among neurointensivists from ANARLF network - follow-up
Comparison of the predicted neurological outcome and quality of life by neurointensivists versus the real neurological outcome and quality of life assessed at the post-ICU follow-up.
Time frame: Month : 3
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