People are throwing a lot of blanket statements out there, throwing the doc under the bus. Here is my 2 cents. .
I don't see it as throwing anyone under a bus.
From the description given, it sounds like nobody even called the ED.
I have seen many times patients who should not have been worked in the ED get worked. For a variety of reasons over the years. Many of which came down to not understanding pathology or emotion.
1: Pronouncing people over the phone is difficult. There are patients who I might stop working in the ER who I would feel less comfortable doing so over the phone. If someone called me and said they had an "end stage cancer patient who does not have a DNR" I immediately have some questions. Why don't they have a DNR? Is that because the family or the patient wanted aggressive treatment up until the end? Why was 911 called? If this was the expected demise of a cancer patient, clearly someone wasn't ready for that or they wouldn't have called 911 .
All very reasonable questions I think any doc would ask if called, but as I said, in this case, I do not see anywhere where a doc was called.
. How do you know it's end stage? Do you know where in their treatment they were? How they were responding?.
I focused in on the extremely emaciated state mentioned twice. In cancer, once a catabolic state is reached, it is terminal. Treatment is usually discontinued at that point for palliative measures. I think most oncologists will tell you though, once that statge is reached, any therapy is palliative.
Don't be so quick to judge an ER doc for not wanting to terminate the resus of a patient with viable rhythm based on third hand information (the medic telling me what the patient's family member is telling them their doctor said)
I am judging a decision on a call that doesn't seem made. I think you are right, if a field provider did call, a plethora of questions need to be answered to a satisfactory level.
But having said that, once the doc laid eyes on the pt. a rhthym is not the only deciding factor in a resuscitative effort. I have seen my fair share of pts in a unit who were basically Frankenstein's monster on a vent with multiple pressors, an IABP, paraenteral nutrition, and hemofiltration who were never going home. (including end stage cancer patients)
Now clearly if someone called in and said that patient was in asystole after 2 rounds of dugs fine, stop. Or if the family was saying stop. But if there is confusion about what is going on with a witnessed arrest I'd rather have them transported and sort it out in person.
Seems very reasonable.
The other thing is the DNR. Yeah, people with end stage cancer should have one. But the truth is people tend to have agressive treatment till very very near the end. A lot of patients aren't ready for the discussion while they are still getting treatment that is aimed at cure..
Just because a patient is getting treatment does not excuse the discussion of prognosis. Some patients refuse to have that conversation, I understand, but intentially not talking about likely outcome or even offering, seems a bit like avoidance to me.
If a patient wants to avoid that's one thing, but a doctor? C'mon.
It's also a very hard discussion to have. One which we often start by feeling out where the patient is in their thinking. If they make clear they aren't receptive to having a DNR we don't push it.
I have no sympathy for doctors who are too emotional for the medicine they practice. If discussions or decisions are too difficult, find another job.
As for pushing DNRs, I am not suggesting pushing them, but I have found how you approach the subject plays a large role in how receptive patients are. I would wager that many patients aren't ready to talk about thier end. But initiating an attempt at that discussion is still the responsibility of the doctor.
I'd recommend that those who think the doctor is just a wuss because their patient doesn't have a DNR should try having one of those discussions with a patient undergoing cancer treatment.
I never suggested the doctor was a wuss because the pt doesn't have a DNR. The patient may have refused one.
Based on the comment about the doctor not discussing one, I question whether or not it was because of how the patient felt or if the doctor was shielding himself.
try having one of those discussions with a patient undergoing cancer treatment.
I have. On a handful of occasions. Including one patient who is a physician. Perhaps I am just a cold hearted :censored::censored::censored::censored::censored::censored::censored:, but I do not find it any more or less difficult than many other aspects of patient care.
(I suspect though it is a combination of my desensitization and way too much pathophysiology.)