District nurses' attitudes toward patient consent: The case of mechanical ventilation on amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients: Results from a French national survey
Abstract
Purpose
In France, a recent law emphasizes patient rights and prohibits unwanted therapies in end-of-life care. As end-of-life home care is increasing, we aimed to assess French district nurses' attitudes toward terminally ill patients' autonomy.
Materials and Methods
We used data from a nationwide telephone survey conducted in 2005 among a random sample of French district nurses (n = 602). Nurses' attitudes were assessed with a clinical case describing a patient (randomly defined as a male or a female aged 50 years) having amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) who urgently needs mechanical ventilation. Nurses were asked whether patient consent was necessary before performing intubation/tracheotomy, and the analysis took into account various covariates, including nurses' religiosity, nurses' attitudes toward living wills, and patient sex.
Results
Overall, 44% of nurses considered that an ALS patient with respiratory failure should always be intubated (53% for a female patient, 40% for a male patient, P < .01), and after intubation, 27% upheld tracheotomy without considering patient consent as a necessary prerequisite (39% among male nurses, 30% among female nurses, P < .05). Poor communication with terminal patients and hostility toward living will were also predictive of willingness to perform both mechanical ventilation and tracheotomy without patient consent.
Conclusions
A significant part of French district nurses may have a disturbing propensity to support intubation and tracheotomy with insufficient attention paid to the patient's will. Further research should investigate potential causal factors (such as increased workload) as well as sex-related attitudes in nurse-patient relationship.
Keywords: District nurses, Unwanted therapy, Patient consent, Mechanical ventilation, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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PII: S0883-9441(07)00191-8
doi:10.1016/j.jcrc.2007.11.007
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
