Intensive Care of Elderly: What do They Wish for Themselves?
NCT05149040 · Status: ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 1472
Last updated 2025-03-27
Summary
Do very elderly adults wish intensive care in the event of acute life-threatening illness and are their next of kin able to predict these preferences?
Very elderly patients are a steeply increasing patient population in intensive care units (ICUs), but the overall benefit of intensive care for these patients remains controversial. Will ICU admission improve survival and quality of life, or will it prolong suffering and delay natural death? Little is known about very elderly Norwegians life sustaining treatment (LST) preferences in these situations where treatment benefit is uncertain.
This project aims to improve critically ill very elderly patients' ICU trajectories by bringing forth knowledge about their treatment preferences, their family members' ability to predict these preferences, and by directing attention to the challenges of consent to critical care in cases of medical uncertainty.
A selv administered, mailed survey will be distributed among 400 outpatients aged 80 years or older and their next of kin. Respondents will be recruited at the ophthalmologic, ear-nose-and-throat and orthopaedic outpatient clinics at Haukeland University Hospital Bergen, Norway.
The investigators developed and validated a survey tool for this purpose, containing 3 hypothetical scenarios of acute life-threatening illness. The scenarios are randomly chosen from 20 hypothetical patient histories and are representative for ICU admission diagnoses in Norway and Europe. The participants will be asked for treatment choices, i.e. wishing admission to intensive care or not. A response option 'not wishing to engage in the treatment decision' is also provided.
Furthermore, the questionnaire includes factors that may influence elderlies' treatment preferences and proxies' ability to predict these preferences including: demographics, religion, previous experience with and / or communication about critical illness, comorbidity, frailty, quality of life, and projections (i.e. the proxy's own treatment preferences).
The respondents are requested to explain their choices by free-text comments after each scenario. They are also asked to elaborate how they wish next-of-kin should contribute to decision making in these cases. Additional space for free-text comments is provided in the end of the questionnaire.
The study design is exploratory. Responses will be analysed with both quantitative statistics and qualitative methods.
Conditions
- Aged, 80 and Over
- Critical Illness
Interventions
- OTHER
-
survey "Intensive care of very elderly: What do they wish for themselves?"
self-administered mailed survey
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
University of Bergen
collaborator OTHER -
Haukeland University Hospital
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Gabriele Leonie I Schwarz, MD · Haukeland University Hospital
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 80 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2021-11-15
- Primary Completion
- 2023-03-31
- Completion
- 2025-12-31
Countries
- Norway
Study Locations
More Related Trials
-
Patient Reported Symptoms the First Week After Intensive Care Unit Discharge and up to Hospital Discharge
NCT05266118 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Treatment Intensity/Factors Predicting Short and Long Term Outcomes in Elderly Critically Ill Patients
NCT00554684 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Impact of Frailty and ICU-AW on Post-ICU Fatigue Self-reported
NCT05984069 ·Status: RECRUITING
-
Sleep Quality of Intensive Care Patients
NCT07167485 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Family Involvement in ICU
NCT06770751 ·Status: RECRUITING
-
5 Years Mortality-rate in Patients Treated for Severe Pneumonia in an ICU - a Retrospective Study
NCT02212093 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Discomfort in Intensive Care Patients - IPREA-N
NCT06091046 ·Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING
-
Health and Quality of Life One Year After Discharge From the Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
NCT02671916 ·Status: TERMINATED
-
Views of Nurses on Alarm Fatigue in ICUs
NCT05163340 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Follow up After Intensive Care. The FUTstudy
NCT02077244 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Limitations and Mortality in Intensive Care
NCT04228380 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Outcomes and Prognostic Factors in COVID-19
NCT04321265 ·Status: UNKNOWN
-
Severe Hypoxemia : Prevalence, Treatment and Outcome
NCT02722031 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Neuropathic Pain and Quality of Life in ICU Survivors
NCT02279212 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Chronic Fatigue Etiology in Intensive Care Unit Survivors: the Role of Neuromuscular Function
NCT03849326 ·Status: WITHDRAWN ·Phase: NA
-
Organ Donation and End-of-life Decisions
NCT04131140 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
A Longitudinal Investigation of Energy Expenditure and Substrate Utilization in Critically Ill Patients
NCT05124860 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Prediction of the Post-intensive Care Syndrome
NCT05690438 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Admission Decisions in the Elderly : the ICE-CUB Study
NCT00912600 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Functional ICUS in Uganda and Their Survival Outcomes
NCT03511742 ·Status: UNKNOWN
-
One Year Outcome of Elderly Patients Admitted to an ICU and Mechanically Ventilated
NCT01679171 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
ICU Recovery in Australian Patients
NCT02225938 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Caregiver Burden and Wellbeing in Relatives of Intensive Care Unit Patients
NCT02712541 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Swallowing Impairments in ICU Survivors and Community-Dwelling Adults
NCT07005037 ·Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING
-
Machine Learning-based Longitudinal Study of Post-ICU Syndrome Development Trajectory in Critically Ill Patients and Construction of Clinical Early Warning Models: a Research Protocol for Longitudinal Study
NCT06427265 ·Status: RECRUITING