Letting go: family willingness to forgo life support

Heart & Lung : the Journal of Critical Care
V SwigartR Arnold

Abstract

To describe the process of family decision making about life support in the critical care setting. Descriptive, exploratory. A northeastern United States university-affiliated medical intensive care unit. Thirty family members of 16 critically ill patients. Letting go or becoming willing to forgo life support involved three interrelated and complex processes: (1) family members sought out, obtained, and tried to understand information about the critical illness; (2) they reviewed the life story of the patient, seeking meaning in the patient's life and the critical illness; and (3) they struggled to maintain family roles and relationships. For most families, interpersonal and intrapsychic work during each process created a reframing of the issues related to the critical illness: (1) they came to believe that they had done all that could be done and were able then to relinquish the goal of recovery for acceptance of a peaceful death; (2) they reviewed the patients's life, finding some meaning and a sense that, given the situation, the patient would not want to continue on life support, and then they moved toward closure; and (3) they were able to bring about (at least within a small group of the closest family members) a sense of...Continue Reading

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