Abstract

Despite its spread in much of the United States and increased international interest, the Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) paradigm still lacks supporting evidence. The interrater reliability of the POLST form to translate patients' values and preferences into medical orders for care at the end of life remains to be studied. To assess the interrater reliability of the medical orders documented in POLST forms. This cross-sectional study was conducted in a public university hospital in southeastern Brazil. Two independent researchers interviewed the same patients or decision-making surrogates (n = 64) during a single episode of hospitalization within a time frame of 1 to 7 days. Eligible participants were hospitalized adults aged 21 years or older who were expected to remain hospitalized for at least 4 days and whose attending physician responded no to the question, Would I be surprised if this patient died in the next year? Data collection occurred between November 1, 2015, and September 20, 2016, and first data analyses were performed on October 3, 2016. Interrater reliability as measured by κ statistics. Of the 64 participants interviewed in the study, 53 (83%) were patients and 11 (17%) were surrogates. Patients' mean (SD) age was 64 (14) years, and 35 patients (55%) and 8 surrogates (73%) were women. Overall, in 5 cases (8%), disagreement in at least 1 medical order for life-sustaining treatment was found in the POLST form, changing from the first interview to the second interview. The κ statistic for cardiopulmonary resuscitation was 0.92 (95% CI, 0.80-1.00); for level of medical intervention, 0.89 (95% CI, 0.76-1.00); and for artificially administered nutrition, 0.92 (95% CI, 0.83-1.00). The high interrater reliability of the medical orders in POLST forms appears to offer further support for this advance care planning paradigm; in addition, the finding that this interrater reliability was not 100% underscores the need to ensure that patients or their surrogates have decision-making capacity and to confirm that the content of POLST forms accurately reflects patients' current treatment preferences.

Highlights

  • The Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) paradigm was created in Oregon in the early 1990s as a coordinated system to elicit, document, and communicate the preferences of patients regarding medical interventions at the end of life.1,2 The POLST paradigm was developed with the ethical purpose of increasing the chances of patients’ values and preferences being respected at the end of their lives by the provision of medical care that is consistent with their values

  • In 5 cases (8%), disagreement in at least 1 medical order for life-sustaining treatment was found in the POLST form, changing from the first interview to the second interview

  • The high interrater reliability of the medical orders in POLST forms appears to offer further support for this advance care planning paradigm; in addition, the finding that this interrater reliability was not 100% underscores the need to ensure that patients or their surrogates have decision-making capacity and to confirm that the content of POLST forms accurately reflects patients’ current treatment preferences

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Summary

Introduction

The Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) paradigm was created in Oregon in the early 1990s as a coordinated system to elicit, document, and communicate the preferences of patients regarding medical interventions at the end of life. The POLST paradigm was developed with the ethical purpose of increasing the chances of patients’ values and preferences being respected at the end of their lives by the provision of medical care that is consistent with their values. The POLST paradigm was developed with the ethical purpose of increasing the chances of patients’ values and preferences being respected at the end of their lives by the provision of medical care that is consistent with their values. It is primarily intended for patients with limited life expectancy and translates patients’ values and preferences of care into a document (the POLST form), which comprises a standardized set of medical orders concerning life-sustaining interventions.

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