The Ethical Complexity of Medical Decision Making in the Adolescent Oncology Patient
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Case of an Adolescent Newly Diagnosed with Carcinoma
3. Adolescent Medical Decision Making (aMDM)
4. The Provider’s Role in aMDM
5. Breaking through Barriers in aMDM
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Point in Shared Decision Making (SDM) * | Lucy’s Case | Recommendations * | Ideal Scenario |
---|---|---|---|
Step 0: Prior to decisions | The hospitalist and oncology team developed a strong relationship with Lucy | Get to know the patient | Team assembles early to establish relationship with Lucy and her mother at diagnosis |
First opportunity to make medical decisions while hospitalized and at end of life | Set expectations for SDM | Discuss shared decision-making goals and establish plan for when Lucy turns 18 years old | |
Offered Lucy autonomy over decisions such as bowel and pain regimens | Engage the patient in smaller choices | Early expectations set by obtaining Lucy’s assent and input in all medical decisions | |
Supportive care and psychology consulted early | Consider consulting palliative care and other support services, such as clinical psychology | Consult services early and build rapport | |
Step 1: When making decisions | Medically reasonable options were discussed such as continued treatment and hospice | Define medically reasonable options with the adolescent and parents/guardian | Allow solo discussions with Lucy regarding medically reasonable options in addition to family meetings |
Lucy and mother had conflicting goals of care and Lucy’s opinions were unclear to the team | Honor medically reasonable decisions and give recommendations, if appropriate | Lucy engages with providers in making medical decisions and has clearly defined goals of care | |
Recognized intense emotions, especially frustration with current medical options | Acknowledge emotions | Acknowledge Lucy’s emotions first then create space for family discussion and input | |
Lucy was inconsistently participatory | Allow different levels of SDM with different families | Lucy participates more readily and frequently in family meetings | |
Step 2: When SDM becomes difficult | Multiple attempts to engage in SDM with family to bring about unified decision were unsuccessful | Always strive to maintain a therapeutic relationship and be flexible while maintaining patient safety | Disagreements acknowledged and validated for both Lucy and her mother/family |
Hospice pursued but unclear if all her values were honored | If the patient and parent(s) disagree about the best treatment plan and both preferences are medically reasonable, reengage in SDM | Any conflicts are mitigated through SDM with providers | |
Lucy had legal authority but felt unable to make decisions because of her dependence on her mother | Acknowledge who has legal authority for a final decision, parent(s)/guardian in the case of a minor | Lucy’s decisions, including end-of-life choices, are made in line with her own values, without burdensome guilt or undue pressure from providers and/or family |
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Nash, A.P.; Harden, A.; Sheth, R.K. The Ethical Complexity of Medical Decision Making in the Adolescent Oncology Patient. Curr. Oncol. 2024, 31, 4158-4164. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080310
Nash AP, Harden A, Sheth RK. The Ethical Complexity of Medical Decision Making in the Adolescent Oncology Patient. Current Oncology. 2024; 31(8):4158-4164. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080310
Chicago/Turabian StyleNash, Ariel Paige, Avis Harden, and Rachna Kalapi Sheth. 2024. "The Ethical Complexity of Medical Decision Making in the Adolescent Oncology Patient" Current Oncology 31, no. 8: 4158-4164. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080310
APA StyleNash, A. P., Harden, A., & Sheth, R. K. (2024). The Ethical Complexity of Medical Decision Making in the Adolescent Oncology Patient. Current Oncology, 31(8), 4158-4164. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080310