Abstract

Resuscitation clinical care plans (resuscitation plans) are gradually replacing 'Not for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation' orders in the hospital setting. The 7-Step Pathway Resuscitation Plan and Alert form (7-Step form) is one example of a resuscitation plan. Treatment recommendations in resuscitation plans currently lack standardised language, creating potential for misinterpretation and patient harm. To explore how terminology used in resuscitation plans is interpreted and applied by clinicians. A mixed methods study surveyed 50 general medical doctors, who were required to interpret and apply a 7-Step form in three case vignettes and define seven key terms. Statistical analysis on multiple choice and thematic analysis on free-text responses was performed. Terminology was inconsistently interpreted and inconsistently applied, resulting in clinically significant differences in treatment choices. Three key themes influenced the application of a resuscitation plan: in-depth discussion, precise documentation and personal experience of the bedside deciding doctor. This study highlights persistent communication deficiencies in resuscitation plan documentation and how this may adversely affect patient care; findings unlikely to be unique to Australia or South Australia. Removing ambiguity by standardising and defining the terminology in resuscitation plans will improve bedside decision-making, while also supporting the rights of the patient to receive appropriate and desired care.

Highlights

  • Resuscitation clinical care plans are gradually replacing ‘Not for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation’ orders in the hospital setting

  • For the purposes of this study, we define a resuscitation plan as a document written by a doctor responsible for a patient’s care which includes a directive regarding cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), and contains recommendations and/or limitations about other interventions, such as intubation or use of life-prolonging antibiotics

  • Documentation should record the goals of care following a discussion with the patient or substitute decision-maker (SDM) about the treatment preferences, informed by the doctor’s medical assessment of likely treatment outcomes [1,2]

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Summary

Introduction

Resuscitation clinical care plans (resuscitation plans) are gradually replacing ‘Not for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation’ orders in the hospital setting. The 7-Step Pathway Resuscitation Plan and Alert form (7-Step form) is one example of a resuscitation plan. Treatment recommendations in resuscitation plans currently lack standardised language, creating potential for misinterpretation and patient harm. Peer Review History: PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process; we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final, published articles. Data Availability Statement: Data cannot be shared publicly because permission was not obtained from survey participants to share their answers in a public database and due to the single

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