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DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.166551
2005;112;6-11; originally published online Nov 28, 2005; Circulation
Part 2: Ethical Issues
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Part 2: Ethical Issues
T
he goals of emergency cardiovascular care are to pre-
serve life, restore health, relieve suffering, limit disabil-
ity, and reverse clinical death. CPR decisions are often made
in seconds by rescuers who may not know the patient or know
if an advance directive exists. As a result, administration of
CPR may sometimes conflict with a patient’s desires or best
interests.
1
This section provides guidelines to healthcare
providers for making the difficult decision to provide or
withhold emergency cardiovascular care.
Ethical Principles
Ethical and cultural norms must be considered when begin-
ning and ending a resuscitation attempt. Although physicians
must play a role in resuscitation decision making, they should
be guided by scientifically proven data and patient
preferences.
Principle of Patient Autonomy
Patient autonomy is generally respected both ethically and
legally. It assumes that a patient can understand what an
intervention involves and consent to or refuse it. Adult
patients are presumed to have decision-making capability
unless they are incapacitated or declared incompetent by a
court of law. Truly informed decisions require that patients
receive and understand accurate information about their
condition and prognosis, the nature of the proposed interven-
tion, alternatives, and risks and benefits. The patient must be
able to deliberate and choose among alternatives and be able
to relate the decision to a stable framework of values. When
decision-making capacity is temporarily impaired by factors
such as concurrent illness, medications, or depression, treat-
ment of these conditions may restore capacity. When patient
preferences are uncertain, emergency conditions should be
treated until those preferences can be clarified.
Advance Directives, Living Wills, and Patient
Self-Determination
An advance directive is any expression of a person’s
thoughts, wishes, or preferences for his or her end-of-life
care. Advance directives can be based on conversations,
written directives, living wills, or durable powers of attorney
for health care. The legal validity of various forms of advance
directives varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Courts
consider written advance directives to be more trustworthy
than recollections of conversations.
A “living will” is a patient’s written direction to physicians
about medical care the patient would approve if he or she
becomes terminally ill and is unable to make decisions. A
living will constitutes clear evidence of the patient’s wishes,
and in most areas it can be legally enforced.
Living wills and advance directives should be reconsidered
periodically because the desires of patients and their medical
condition may change over time. The Patient Self-
Determination Act of 1991 requires healthcare institutions
and managed-care organizations to inquire whether patients
have advance directives. Healthcare institutions are required
to facilitate the completion of advance directives if patients
desire them.
Surrogate Decision Makers
When a patient has lost the capacity to make medical
decisions, a close relative or friend can become a surrogate
decision maker for the patient. Most states have laws that
designate the legal surrogate decision maker (guardian) for an
incompetent patient who has not designated a decision maker
through a durable power of attorney for health care. The law
recognizes the following order of priority for guardianship in
the absence of a previously designated decision maker: (1)
spouse, (2) adult child, (3) parent, (4) any relative, (5) person
nominated by the person caring for the incapacitated patient,
(6) specialized care professional as defined by law. Surro-
gates should base their decisions on the patient’s previously
expressed preferences if known; otherwise, surrogates should
make decisions on the basis of the patient’s best interest.
Children should be involved in decision making at a level
appropriate for their maturity and should be asked to consent
to healthcare decisions when able. Although persons H1102118
years of age rarely possess the legal authority to consent to
their own health care except under specific legally defined
situations (ie, emancipated minors and for specific health
conditions such as sexually transmitted diseases and preg-
nancy), the dissent of an older child should be taken seri-
ously. If parents and an older child are in conflict about a
treatment plan, every effort should be made to resolve the
conflict. The use of force is rarely appropriate in the delivery
of medical care to adolescents.
Principle of Futility
If the purpose of a medical treatment cannot be achieved, the
treatment is considered futile. The key determinants of medical
futility are length and quality of life. An intervention that cannot
establish any increase in length or quality of life is futile.
Patients or families may ask physicians to provide care that
is inappropriate. Physicians, however, are not obliged to
provide such care when there is scientific and social consen-
sus that the treatment is ineffective.
2
An example is CPR for
patients with signs of irreversible death. In addition, health-
care providers are not obliged to provide CPR if no benefit
from CPR and advanced cardiovascular life support (ACLS)
can be expected (ie, CPR would not restore effective circu-
lation). Beyond these clinical circumstances and in the
absence of advance directives or living wills, resuscitation
should be offered to all patients.
(Circulation. 2005;112:IV-6-IV-11.)
? 2005 American Heart Association.
This special supplement to Circulation is freely available at
http://www.circulationaha.org
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.166551
IV-6
A careful evaluation of the patient’s prognosis for both
length and quality of life will determine whether CPR is
appropriate. CPR is inappropriate when survival is not
expected. In conditions for which the chance of survival is
borderline, the morbidity rate is relatively high, and the
burden to the patient is high, the patient’s desires or (when the
patient’s desires are unknown) the legally authorized surro-
gate decision maker’s preferences about initiation of resusci-
tation should be supported. Noninitiation of resuscitation and
discontinuation of life-sustaining treatment during or after
resuscitation are ethically equivalent, and in situations in
which the prognosis is uncertain, a trial of treatment should
be considered while further information is gathered to help
determine the likelihood of survival and expected clinical
course.
Withholding and Withdrawing CPR
Criteria for Not Starting CPR
Scientific evaluation shows that few criteria can accurately
predict the futility of CPR (see Part 7.5: “Postresuscitation
Support”). In light of this uncertainty, all patients in cardiac
arrest should receive resuscitation unless
●
The patient has a valid Do Not Attempt Resuscitation
(DNAR) order
●
The patient has signs of irreversible death (eg, rigor mortis,
decapitation, decomposition, or dependent lividity)
●
No physiological benefit can be expected because vital
functions have deteriorated despite maximal therapy (eg,
progressive septic or cardiogenic shock)
Withholding resuscitation attempts in the delivery room is
appropriate for newborn infants when gestation, birth weight,
or congenital anomalies are associated with almost certain
early death and when unacceptably high morbidity is likely
among the rare survivors. Two examples from the published
literature include extreme prematurity (gestational age H1102123
weeks or birth weight H11021400 g) and anencephaly.
Terminating Resuscitative Efforts
The decision to terminate resuscitative efforts rests with the
treating physician in the hospital and is based on considera-
tion of many factors, including time to CPR, time to defibril-
lation, comorbid disease, prearrest state, and initial arrest
rhythm. None of these factors alone or in combination is
clearly predictive of outcome.
Witnessed collapse, bystander CPR, and a short time
interval from collapse to arrival of professionals improve the
chances of a successful resuscitation.
In many reports of pediatric resuscitation outcomes, sur-
vival falls as the duration of resuscitative efforts increases.
3
In
many reports of resuscitation outcome, the patient’s chance of
being discharged from the hospital alive and neurologically
intact diminishes as the duration of the resuscitation attempt
increases.
4–7
The responsible clinician should stop the resus-
citation attempt if there is a high degree of certainty that the
patient will not respond to further ACLS.
For the newborn infant, discontinuation of resuscitation
can be justified after 10 minutes without signs of life despite
continuous and adequate resuscitative efforts. The prognosis
for survival or survival without disability has been shown to
be extremely poor when there is a lack of response to
intensive resuscitative efforts of H1102210 minutes’ duration.
8–11
In the past, children who underwent prolonged resuscita-
tion and absence of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC)
after 2 doses of epinephrine were considered unlikely to
survive,
12
but intact survival after unusually prolonged in-
hospital resuscitation has been documented.
13–15
Prolonged
efforts should be made for infants and children with recurring
or refractory VF or VT, drug toxicity, or a primary hypother-
mic insult.
In the absence of mitigating factors, prolonged resuscita-
tive efforts are unlikely to be successful.
16
If ROSC of any
duration occurs, however, it may be appropriate to consider
extending the resuscitative effort. Other issues, such as drug
overdose and severe prearrest hypothermia (eg, submersion in
icy water), should be considered when determining whether
to extend resuscitative efforts.
DNAR Orders
Unlike other medical interventions, CPR is initiated without a
physician’s order, based on implied consent for emergency
treatment. A physician’s order is necessary to withhold CPR.
Physicians must initiate a discussion about the use of CPR
with all adults admitted for medical and surgical care or with
their surrogates. Terminally ill patients may fear abandon-
ment and pain more than death, so physicians should also
reassure the patient and family that pain control and other
aspects of medical care will continue even if resuscitation is
withheld.
The attending physician should write the DNAR order in
the patient’s chart with a note explaining the rationale for the
DNAR order and any other specific limitations of care. The
limitation-of-treatment order should contain guidelines for
specific emergency interventions that may arise (eg, use of
pressor agents, blood products, or antibiotics). The scope of a
DNAR order should be specific about which interventions are
to be withheld. A DNAR order does not automatically
preclude interventions such as administration of parenteral
fluids, nutrition, oxygen, analgesia, sedation, antiarrhythmics,
or vasopressors unless these are included in the order. Some
patients may choose to accept defibrillation and chest com-
pressions but not intubation and mechanical ventilation.
Oral DNAR orders are not acceptable. If the attending
physician is not physically present, nursing staff may accept
a DNAR order by telephone with the understanding that the
physician will sign the order promptly. DNAR orders should
be reviewed periodically, particularly if the patient’s condi-
tion changes.
The attending physician should clarify both the DNAR
order and plans for future care with nurses, consultants, house
staff, and the patient or surrogate and offer an opportunity for
discussion and resolution of conflicts. Basic nursing and
comfort care (ie, oral hygiene, skin care, patient positioning,
and measures to relieve pain and symptoms) must always be
continued. DNAR orders carry no implications about other
forms of treatment, and other aspects of the treatment plan
should be documented separately and communicated to staff.
Part 2: Ethical Issues IV-7
DNAR orders should be reviewed before surgery by the
anesthesiologist, attending surgeon, and patient or surrogate
to determine their applicability in the operating suite and
postoperative recovery room.
Initiation of CPR in Patients With DNAR Orders
Studies about DNAR orders suggest that healthcare providers
who respond to those in cardiac or respiratory arrest who do
not exhibit signs of irreversible death (listed below) should
promptly provide resuscitative measures to the best of their
ability unless or until they receive legally valid instructions
(interpretable advance directives, DNAR orders, or valid
surrogate directives) not to intervene. Out-of-hospital DNAR
orders apply to the patient with no signs of life.
17,18
Withdrawal of Life Support
Withdrawal of life support is an emotionally complex deci-
sion for family and staff. Withholding and withdrawing life
support are ethically similar. A decision to withdraw life
support is justifiable when a patient is determined to be dead,
if the physician and patient or surrogate agree that treatment
goals cannot be met, or if the burden to the patient of
continued treatment would exceed any benefits.
Some patients do not regain consciousness after cardiac
arrest and ROSC. In most cases the prognosis for adults who
remain deeply comatose (Glasgow Coma Scale Score H110215)
after cardiac arrest can be predicted with accuracy after 2 to
3 days.
19
Specific physical findings or laboratory tests may be
helpful to assist with this process. A meta-analysis of 33
studies of outcome of anoxic-ischemic coma documented that
the following 3 factors were associated with poor outcome:
●
Absence of pupillary response to light on the third day
●
Absence of motor response to pain by the third day
●
Bilateral absence of cortical response to median nerve
somatosensory-evoked potentials when used in normother-
mic patients who were comatose for at least 72 hours after
a hypoxic-ischemic insult (see Part 7.5: “Postresuscitation
Support”)
20
A recent meta-analysis of 11 studies involving 1914
patients
21
documented 5 clinical signs that were found to
strongly predict death or poor neurologic outcome, with 4 of
the 5 predictors detectable at 24 to 72 hours after
resuscitation:
●
Absent corneal reflex at 24 hours
●
Absent pupillary response at 24 hours
●
Absent withdrawal response to pain at 24 hours
●
No motor response at 24 hours
●
No motor response at 72 hours
Withdrawal of life support is ethically permissible under
these circumstances.
Patients in the end stage of an incurable disease, whether
responsive or unresponsive, should have care that ensures
their comfort and dignity. Care is provided to minimize
suffering associated with pain, dyspnea, delirium, convul-
sions, and other terminal complications. For such patients it is
ethically acceptable to gradually increase the dosage of
narcotics and sedatives to relieve pain and other symptoms,
even to levels that might concomitantly shorten the patient’s
life.
Issues Related to
Out-of-Hospital Resuscitation
Withholding CPR Versus Withdrawing CPR
BLS training urges the first-arriving lay responder at a
cardiac arrest to begin CPR. Healthcare providers are ex-
pected to provide BLS and ACLS as part of their duty to
respond. There are a few exceptions to this rule:
●
A person lies dead, with obvious clinical signs of irrevers-
ible death (eg, rigor mortis, dependent lividity, decapita-
tion, or decomposition).
●
Attempts to perform CPR would place the rescuer at risk of
physical injury.
●
The patient/surrogate has indicated with an advance direc-
tive (DNAR order) that resuscitation is not desired.
Neither lay rescuers nor professionals should make a
judgment about the present or future quality of life of a
cardiac arrest victim on the basis of current or anticipated
neurologic status. Such snap judgments are often inaccurate.
Quality of life should never be used as a criterion to withhold
CPR, because conditions such as irreversible brain damage or
brain death cannot be reliably assessed or predicted.
22–37
Out-of-hospital DNAR protocols must be clear to all
involved (eg, physicians, patients, family members, loved
ones, and out-of-hospital healthcare providers). Advance
directives can take many forms (eg, written bedside orders
from physicians, wallet identification cards, identification
bracelets, and other mechanisms approved by the local
emergency medical services [EMS] authority).
The ideal EMS DNAR form should be portable if the
patient is transferred, and in addition to including out-of-
hospital DNAR orders, the form should provide direction to
EMS about whether to initiate or continue life-sustaining
interventions in the patient who is not pulseless and apneic.
Advance Directives in the Out-of-Hospital Setting
A significant number of patients for whom 911 is called
because of cardiac arrest are also chronically ill, have a
terminal illness, or have a written advance directive (DNAR
order). States and other jurisdictions have varying laws about
out-of-hospital DNAR orders and advance directives.
38
In
some cases in which a DNAR order exists, especially where
there are differing opinions among family members, it may be
difficult to determine whether resuscitation should be initi-
ated. EMS professionals should initiate CPR and ACLS if
there is reason to believe that
●
There is reasonable doubt about the validity of a DNAR
order or advance directive
●
The patient may have changed his or her mind
●
The best interests of the patient are in question
Sometimes within a few minutes of the start of a resusci-
tation attempt, relatives or other medical personnel will arrive
and confirm that the patient had clearly expressed a wish that
resuscitation not be attempted. CPR or other life support
IV-8 Circulation December 13, 2005
measures may be discontinued with the approval of medical
direction when further information becomes available.
In situations in which the EMS professional cannot obtain
clear information about the patient’s wishes, resuscitative
measures should be initiated.
Family members may be concerned that EMS personnel
will not follow advance directives written in the hospital if an
out-of-hospital arrest occurs. This should be dealt with by
asking the physician to write an out-of-hospital DNAR order
on the appropriate form used in the jurisdiction where the
patient would be potentially attended by EMS. The DNAR
order should be available and provided to EMS responders as
soon as they arrive on the scene of an emergency involving
the patient. In situations in which a DNAR order is not
provided to EMS personnel, resuscitative efforts should be
attempted. The key to preventing such dilemmas rests with
the patient’s regular physician who has been providing
prearrest care.
Terminating a Resuscitation in a BLS
Out-of-Hospital System
Rescuers who start BLS should continue until one of the
following occurs:
●
Restoration of effective, spontaneous circulation and
ventilation.
●
Care is transferred to a more senior-level emergency
medical professional who may determine that the patient is
unresponsive to the resuscitation attempt.
●
Reliable criteria indicating irreversible death are present.
●
The rescuer is unable to continue because of exhaustion or
the presence of dangerous environmental hazards or be-
cause continuation of resuscitative efforts places other lives
in jeopardy.
●
A valid DNAR order is presented to rescuers.
Defibrillators are required standard equipment on ambu-
lances in most states, so the absence of a “shockable” rhythm
on the defibrillator after an adequate trial of CPR can be the
key criterion for withdrawing BLS in the absence of timely
arrival of ACLS. State or local EMS authorities must develop
protocols for initiation and withdrawal of BLS in areas where
ACLS is not rapidly available or may be significantly
delayed. Local circumstances, resources, and risk to rescuers
should be considered.
Transport of Patients in Cardiac Arrest
If an EMS system does not allow nonphysicians to pronounce
death and stop resuscitative efforts, personnel may be forced
to transport to the hospital a deceased victim of cardiac arrest
who proved to be refractory to proper BLS/ACLS care. Such
an action is unethical.
This situation creates the following dilemma: if carefully
executed BLS and ACLS treatment protocols fail in the
out-of-hospital setting, then how could the same treatment
succeed in the emergency department? A number of studies
have consistently observed that H110211% of patients transported
with continuing CPR survive to hospital discharge.
Delayed or token efforts, a so-called “slow-code” (know-
ingly providing ineffective resuscitation), that appear to
provide CPR and ACLS are inappropriate. This practice
compromises the ethical integrity of healthcare providers and
undermines the physician-patient/nurse-patient relationship.
Many EMS systems authorize the termination of a resus-
citation attempt in the out-of-hospital setting. Protocols for
pronouncement of death and appropriate transport of the body
by non-EMS vehicles should be established. EMS personnel
must be trained to focus on dealing sensitively with family
and friends.
Providing Emotional Support to the Family
Despite our best efforts, most resuscitations fail. Notifying
family members of the death of a loved one is an important
aspect of a resuscitation attempt that should be done compas-
sionately, with care taken to accommodate the cultural and
religious beliefs and practices of the family.
39,40
Family members have often been excluded from being
present during the attempted resuscitation of a child or other
relative. Surveys have suggested that healthcare providers
hold a range of opinions about the presence of family
members at resuscitation attempts.
41–51
Several commentaries
have noted the potential for family members to become
disruptive or interfere with resuscitation procedures, the
possibility of family member syncope, and the possibility of
increased exposure to legal liability.
However, several surveys administered before observation
of resuscitative efforts showed that the majority of family
members wished to be present during a resuscitation at-
tempt.
45–49
Family members with no medical background
have reported that being at a loved one’s side and saying
goodbye during the final moments of life was comforting.
45,46,50
Family members also have reported that it helped them adjust
to the death of their loved one,
50,51
and most indicated they
would do so again.
50
Several retrospective reports note
positive reactions from family members,
41–43
many of whom
said that they felt a sense of having helped their loved one and
of easing their own grieving.
44
Most parents surveyed wanted
to be given the option to decide whether they would want to
be present at the resuscitation of their child.
43,52
Thus, in the absence of data documenting harm and in light
of data suggesting that it may be helpful, offering select
family members the opportunity to be present during a
resuscitation seems reasonable and desirable (assuming that
the patient, if an adult, has not raised a prior objection.
Parents and other family members seldom ask if they can be
present unless encouraged to do so by healthcare providers.
Resuscitation team members should be sensitive to the
presence of family members during resuscitative efforts,
assigning a team member to the family to answer questions,
clarify information, and otherwise offer comfort.
49
Ethics of Organ and Tissue Donation
The ECC community supports efforts to respond to the need
for organ and tissue donations. Medical directors of EMS
agencies should discuss the following issues with the organ
procurement program in their region:
●
Need for tissue from donors pronounced dead in the field
Part 2: Ethical Issues IV-9
●
How permission for organ and tissue donations will be
obtained from the patient’s relatives
●
How clearly defined guidelines for organ and tissue pro-
curement will be available to all healthcare providers both
in the hospital and out of the hospital
●
Possible differences between applicable laws and societal
values in procedures for organ procurement
Research and Training Issues
The use of newly dead patients for training raises important
ethical and legal issues. The consent of family members is
both ideal and respectful of the newly dead but not always
possible or practical at the time of cardiac arrest. Research
advocates argue that presuming consent in these situations
serves a “greater good” that will benefit the living. Others
claim that consent is unnecessary because the body is “non
persona” and without autonomy or interests. These argu-
ments, however, do not consider the potential for harm to
surviving family members who may oppose using a recently
deceased loved one for the purpose of training or research.
This view also ignores significant cultural differences in the
acceptance or nonacceptance of the use of cadavers.
Clinical research in patients with cardiorespiratory arrest is
challenging. In general, research involving human subjects
requires the consent of the subject or, in some cases, a legally
authorized surrogate. This has proved to be a challenge for
research involving patients in cardiac arrest because research
interventions must frequently be implemented at a time when
obtaining consent may be impossible. After much public
discussion and in recognition of the value of this type of
human research, the government, through the Food and Drug
Administration and the National Institutes of Health, adopted
regulations that allow an exception for the need to obtain
informed consent in certain limited circumstances. Stringent
preresearch directives require that researchers consult with
experts plus representative laypersons who might be study
patients and to make full public disclosure of the details of the
study methodology. Investigators must engage in candid
public discussion of the need for resuscitation research,
acknowledge the lack of an evidence-based foundation for
many current practices, and describe the many potential
benefits of the research.
In 1996 Congress passed the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act, commonly referred to as HIPAA. As
its name suggests, one of the primary goals of the HIPAA
legislation was to ensure the availability and continuity of
health insurance coverage, but it has been amended over the
past few years to include provisions that protect the
privacy of patients’ health information and their medical
records. For details see http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/finalreg.
html. Healthcare providers involved in training and research
must be careful to protect patient privacy and the confiden-
tiality of patient data.
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Part 2: Ethical Issues IV-11