Limiting futile therapy as part of end-of-life care in intensive care units.

Anaesthesiol Intensive Ther

Department of Cardiac Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Leszek Giec Upper-Silesian Medical Centre, Medical University of Silesia, Katowice, Poland.

Published: October 2022

The debate about medical futility often involves intensive care units where life-support procedures are routinely applied. Futile therapy is part of end-of-life therapy. In the discussion about medical futility it is important to distinguish the effect of therapy from the benefit for the patient. The goal of treatment is not to maintain the function of an organ, body part or physiological activity, but to maintain health as a whole. Prolonging ineffective treatment violates the standard of good medical practice. In 2014, the first Polish guidelines on limiting futile therapy in patients treated in intensive care units were published. This document presents the official position of intensive care experts consulted by medical societies of other medical disciplines. Limitation of futile therapy by withdrawing from already used treatments or withholding new therapies does not mean that the role of medical personnel has ended. Intensive care turns into palliative care. The list of comorbidities showing a statistically significant correlation with medical futility has been refined. These include heart failure (NYHA III/IV), neoplastic disease and disseminated neoplastic process, and failure of two or more organs. The published survey results are devastating; 66-89% of intensive care nurses have provided futile treatment in their careers. Intensivists estimated that, on average, 20% of patients in intensive care units receive futile therapy. There is a need to disseminate standards and procedures related to end-of-life care in Polish intensive care units.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10156502PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5114/ait.2022.119124DOI Listing

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