Abstract

Patients with serious illnesses are often encouraged to actively deliberate about the desirability of life support. Yet it is unknown whether deliberation changes the substance or quality of such decisions. To identify differences in decisions about life support interventions and goals of care made intuitively vs deliberatively by patients with serious illnesses. Randomized clinical trial in which patients were asked to express treatment preferences in a series of clinical scenarios. Participants were 199 hospitalized patients aged 60 years and older with serious oncologic, cardiac, and pulmonary illnesses treated in a large, urban academic hospital from July 1, 2015, through March 15, 2016. Patients in the intuitive group were subjected to a cognitive load and instructed to answer each question immediately based on gut instinct. Patients in the deliberative group were not cognitively loaded, were instructed to think carefully about their answers, and were required to explain their answers. Choices regarding life support (4 scenarios) and goals of care (1 scenario), concordance of these choices with patients' valuations of health states that could follow from them, and decisional uncertainty. Of 199 patients, 132 (66%) were male and the mean (SD) age was 67.2 (5.0) years. Similar proportions of patients in the intuitive group (n = 97) and the deliberative group (n = 102) said they would accept a feeding tube for chronic aspiration (42% vs 44%, respectively; difference, -2%; 95% CI, -16% to 12%; P = .79), antibiotics for life-threatening infection in the event of terminal illness (39% vs 43%, respectively; difference, -4%; 95% CI, -18% to 10%; P = .57), a trial of mechanical ventilation (59% vs 60%, respectively; difference,-1%; 95% CI, -15% to 13%; P = .88), and a tracheostomy tube (37% vs 41%, respectively; difference, -4%; 95% CI, -22% to 13%; P = .64). Patients in the deliberative group were slightly more likely than patients in the intuitive group to choose a palliative approach to treatment in the event of serious illness (45% vs 30%, respectively; difference, 15%; 95% CI, 1%-29%; P = .04). Across scenarios, decisional uncertainty was similar between the 2 groups (all P > .05), and intuitive decisions were either equally or more closely aligned with patients' health state valuations than deliberative decisions. In this study, encouraging hospitalized patients with serious illnesses to deliberate on end-of-life decisions did not change the content or improve the quality of these decisions. It is important to evaluate whether decision aids and structured communication interventions improve seriously ill patients' choices. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02487810.

Highlights

  • Patients with serious illnesses are often asked to articulate their preferences regarding treatment at the end of life

  • The implicit assumption is that active deliberation will help patients choose care that is most consistent with their underlying values. This norm of promoting deliberation is supported by basic research showing that human cognition involves 2 different but interrelated modes of processing: one controlled by an intuitive system, which is fast and associative, and the other controlled by a deliberative system, which is slower, rule based, and analytic.[7,8,9]

  • A dominant view holds that the intuitive mode relies on multiple heuristics that can lead to systemic errors in judgment,[10] whereas the deliberative system is commonly thought to help prevent such errors.[8]

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with serious illnesses are often asked to articulate their preferences regarding treatment at the end of life Such decisions include preferences for receiving specific medical interventions such as mechanical ventilation, and more general preferences for care designed to maximize longevity or comfort if these goals were to conflict.[1,2] The widespread promotion of shared decision making and burgeoning development of formal decision aids represent efforts to foster careful deliberation about such decisions.[3,4,5,6] The implicit assumption is that active deliberation will help patients choose care that is most consistent with their underlying values.

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