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”So you think I’ll survive?” – a qualitative study about doctor-patient dialogues preceding high-risk cardiac surgery or intervention
  1. Margrethe Aase Schaufel (margrethe.aase{at}isf.uib.no)
  1. Department of Public Health and Primary Health Care, Norway
    1. Jan Erik Nordrehaug (jan.nordrehaug{at}helse-bergen.no)
    1. Department of Heart Disease, Haukeland University Hospital, Norway
      1. Kirsti Malterud (kirsti.malterud{at}isf.uib.no)
      1. Research Unit for General Practice, Unifob Health, Bergen, Norway

        Abstract

        Objective: To explore doctor-patient interactions and decision-making processes prior to high-risk cardiac surgery or intervention with special attention to existential challenges.

        Design, setting and participants: We conducted a qualitative study with data drawn from doctor-patient dialogues preceding high-risk procedures. The study setting was the cardiac department of a university hospital with 24-hours emergency service. We recruited a purposive sample of ten patients and eight doctors. The patients were categorized as high-risk patients in accordance with EuroSCORE and established angiographic procedural high-risk criteria. Transcripts from the dialogues were analyzed with systematic text condensation, inspired by discourse analysis.

        Main outcome measure: Accounts of doctor-patient interaction reflecting existential aspects of the decision-making process.

        Results: The main existential concerns identified in the doctor-patient interactions were surviving uncertainty, negotiating responsibility and trusting the doctor’s proficiency. When handling uncertainty, doctors imparted complex information about risk, warnings and recommendations, while patients sought and trusted the doctors’ advice. Though the decisions were made in asymmetrical power relations, they were based on a shared responsibility discussed and defined throughout the dialogues. The patients expressed a profound confidence in the doctors` ability to get them through the high-risk treatment and give the best help possible.

        Conclusions: Uncertainty, mortality, responsibility and trust are fundamental existential issues concerning both patients and doctors prior to high-risk procedures, with an impact on decision-making processes. Increasing focus on underlying existential conditions, ethical reasoning and power relations in medical education may improve the quality of shared decision-making and informed consent related to high-risk treatment.

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