Abstract

BackgroundThe care of terminally ill patients is fraught with ethical and medical dilemmas carried by healthcare professionals. The present study aims to explore the approaches of Lebanese attending physicians towards palliative care, end of life (EOL) care, and patient management in two tertiary care university hospitals with distinct medical culture.MethodsFour hundred attending physicians from the American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC) and Hotel Dieu de France (HDF) were recruited. Participants were Medical Doctors in direct contact with adult patients that could be subject to EOL situations providing relevant demographic, educational, religious as well as personal, medical or patient-centric data.ResultsThe majority of physicians in both establishments were previously exposed to life-limiting decisions but remains uncomfortable with the decision to stop or limit resuscitation. However, physicians with an American training (AUBMC) were significantly more likely to exhibit readiness to initiate and discuss DNR with patients (p<0.0001). While the paternalistic medicinal approach was prevalent in both groups, physicians with a European training (HDF) more often excluded patient involvement based on family preference (p<0.0001) or to spare them from a traumatic situation (p=0.003). The majority of respondents reported that previous directives from the patient were fundamental to life-limiting decisions. However, the influence of patient and medical factors (e.g. culture, religion, life expectancy, age, socioeconomic status) was evidenced in the HDF group.ConclusionEarly physician-initiated EOL discussions remain challenged in Lebanon. Paternalistic attitudes limit shared decision making and are most evident in European-trained physicians. Establishing a sound and effective framework providing legal, ethical and religious guidance is thus needed in Lebanon.

Highlights

  • The rising incidence of incurable populations spurred research into the conceptualization and characterization of optimal end-of-life (EOL) planning and enactment.Delivering optimal ethical care has become a prevailing concern in healthcare systems strained in the life-limiting context of older age and incurable chronic illness [1]

  • One hundred practicing physicians from the American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC) and 67 from Hotel Dieu de France (HDF) hospital participated in this study

  • While the degree of religiosity was comparable in both settings, the vast majority of physicians were Christian in the HDF hospital sample (98.5%), while the AUB exhibited a religiously diverse population that remained predominately formed of Christian (35.3%) and Muslim (45.9%) physicians

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Summary

Introduction

Delivering optimal ethical care has become a prevailing concern in healthcare systems strained in the life-limiting context of older age and incurable chronic illness [1]. In this regard, palliative and terminal care rises in prominence as an avenue for cost-effective improved EOL medical care and quality of living [2]. EOL decisions involve consideration of preferences and priorities in terms of life prolonging or life limiting interventions, palliative treatment as well as preferred care/death settings. The care of terminally ill patients is fraught with ethical and medical dilemmas carried by healthcare professionals. The present study aims to explore the approaches of Lebanese attending physicians towards palliative care, end of life (EOL) care, and patient management in two tertiary care university hospitals with distinct medical culture

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