Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Coaching Doctors and Nurses to Improve Ethical Decision-making in Team
Sponsor: University Hospital, Ghent
Summary
Literature and a pilot study performed in 2019 indicate room for enhancing openness to discuss ethical sensitive issues within and between teams, and improving goal-oriented care and decision-making for the benefit of the patient at end-of-life, worldwide and more specifically in Belgium and in the Ghent University Hospital. The CODE study intervention performed in 2021 suggests already an improvement in goal oriented care operationalized via written Do-Not-Intubate and Do-Not-Attempt Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (DNI-DNACPR orders in the Ghent University Hospital. In this study, the investigators found a nearly doubling of the incidence in written DNI-DNACPR in patient potentially receiving excessive treatment (PET) (from 19.7% to 29.7%, p\<0.001) and in patients hospitalized for the first time (from 1.9% to 3.4%, p=0.011) without increasing one-year mortality, after coaching doctors during 4 months in self-reflective and empowering leadership, and coping with group dynamics. However, the investigators found no improvement in the perception of the quality of the ethical climate by clinicians, more specifically by nurses. Despite the fact that ethical decision-making is considered a strategic priority in the Ghent University Hospital and an intense communication campaign, clinicians identified also a much smaller number of PET during this interventional study than during the observational pilot study in 2019. Although fading attention for the study over time and visibility of the electronic CODE alert to identify PET was claimed as the main reasons by 75% and 50.7% of the nurses, respectively, 95% expressed the desire to keep on using this alert in the future. This underscores a deeper concern in nurses. More than 40% expressed fear of blaming doctors or skepticism regarding the impact of identifying PET. Nonetheless, 35% acknowledged improvement in interdisciplinary meetings about end-of-life issues since study initiation. These findings highlights the need to additionally coach the entire team in future studies. Indeed, creating a safe climate which enhances inter-professional shared decision-making for the benefit of the patient requires both, specific self-reflective and empowering leadership skills in doctors and head nurses (including the management of group dynamics in the interdisciplinary team), and confidence in speaking up in nurses and other health care professionals. This is what the investigators want to develop with this intervention. These skills will also help clinicians during patient and family meetings which will enable clinicians to better take into account the patient's and family's wishes.
Official title: Coaching Doctors and Nurses to Improve Ethical Decision-making in Team: a Stepped Wedge Cluster Randomized Trial in 10 Departments of the Ghent University Hospital
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
360
Start Date
2026-04-01
Completion Date
2028-06-30
Last Updated
2026-04-09
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Usual Care Group
The control group will receive usual care in which the quality of the ethical decision-making is determined by the clinical team according to their usual pratice. Except from a treatment-limitation-decisions guideline which focuses on the legal and deontological framework, no other guideline with regard to ethical decision-making has been implemented at the Ghent University Hospital.
CODE II intervention
1\) One interactive session of two hours focusing on the concepts of medical-ethical decision-making, the psychological challenge of dealing with ethically sensitive medical topics, empowering leadership and the importance of "speaking up" within the team. 2) Every clinician will be invited to provide perceptions of excessive treatment via the electronic patient file. Once a patient is identified by two or more different clinicians, an email will be sent to coaches and the clinicians in charge of the PET during intervention period. 3) The 4 months coaching intervention will consist of : a. Doctors and head nurses : individual coaching sessions in self-reflective and empowering leadership and in managing groups dynamics with regard to ethical decision-making in team about PET patients. b. All clinicians : multidisciplinary coaching during work shift hand-overs and structured metareflective sessions on specific themes related to ethical decision-making in team about PET.
Locations (1)
Ghent University Hospital
Ghent, East-Flanders, Belgium