Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to clarify the relationship between the content of proxy decision-making made by families of patients with malignant brain tumors regarding treatment policies and daily care and the cues leading to those decisions.

Methods: Semi-structured personal interviews were used to collect data. Seven family members of patients with malignant brain tumors were selected to participate in the study by purposive sampling method from June to August 2022 in the Patient Family Association of Japan. Responses were content analyzed to explore the relationship between the content of decisions regarding "treatment policies" and "daily care" and the cues influencing those decisions. Semi-structured interviews were analyzed by using thematic analysis.

Results: The contents of proxy decisions regarding "treatment policies" included implementation, interruption, and termination of initial treatments, free medical treatments, use of respirators, and end-of-life sedation and included six cues: treatment policies suggested by the primary physician, information and knowledge about the disease and treatment obtained by the family from limited resources, perceived life threat from symptom worsening, words and reactions from the patient regarding treatment, patient's personality and way of life inferred from their treatment preferences, family's thoughts and values hoping for better treatment for the patient. Decisions for "daily care" included meal content and methods, excretion, mobility, maintaining cleanliness, rehabilitation, continuation or resignation from work, treatment settings (outpatient or inpatient), and ways to spend time outside and included seven cues: words and thoughts from the patient about their way of life, patient's reactions and life history inferred from their preferred way of living, things the patient can do to maintain daily life and roles, awareness of the increasing inability to do things in daily life, family's underlying thoughts and values about how to spend the remaining time, approval from family members regarding the care setting, advice from medical professionals on living at home.

Conclusions: For "treatment policies," guidelines from medical professionals were a key cue, while for "daily care," the small signs from the patients in their daily lives served as cues for proxy decision-making. This may be due to the lack of information available to families and the limited time available for discussion with the patient. Families of patients with malignant brain tumors repeatedly use multiple cues to make proxy decision-making under high uncertainty. Therefore, nurses supporting proxy decision-making should assess the family's situation and provide cues that facilitate informed and confident decisions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11997684PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnss.2025.02.001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

proxy decision-making
20
patients malignant
16
malignant brain
16
families patients
12
brain tumors
12
"treatment policies"
12
"daily care"
12
cues
8
relationship content
8
treatment policies
8

Similar Publications

Background And Purpose: Siblings of children with chronic health conditions face unique psychosocial challenges, yet their voices remain underrepresented in research. While existing studies primarily rely only on parental proxy reports of sibling well-being or focus on experiences of older siblings or are confined to specific conditions like cancer, there is limited understanding of siblings' experiences more broadly from their voice. This study investigated the experiences of siblings of children with chronic health conditions in Australia from both sibling and parental perspectives.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Are lipid-lowering drugs harmful to cognitive performance?: A Mendelian randomization study.

Medicine (Baltimore)

September 2025

Key Laboratory of Endocrine Glucose & Lipids Metabolism and Brain Aging, Ministry of Education; Department of Endocrinology, Shandong Provincial Hospital Affiliated to Shandong First Medical University, Jinan, Shandong Province, China.

Cardiovascular disease is the leading global cause of mortality, affecting the development of cognitive impairment in the elderly. Lipid-lowering drugs are commonly used to manage cardiovascular disease risk, but their effects on cognitive performance have produced conflicting results in previous research. To better guide the selective decision-making and application of lipid-lowering drugs, this study aims to determine the causal relationship between lipid-lowering drugs and cognitive performance through Mendelian randomization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Despite being efficacious for acute ischemic stroke, treatment with thrombolysis is often delayed because of the inaccessibility of informed consent from patient proxies. Decisional conflict could be an important contributor to this delay; however, its influencing factors remain unknown. This study sought to survey the decisional conflict of proxies for sufferers of acute ischaemic stroke and explore the influencing factors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Autonomous systems operating in high-dimensional environments increasingly rely on prioritization heuristics to allocate attention and assess risk, yet these mechanisms can introduce cognitive biases such as salience, spatial framing, and temporal familiarity that influence decision-making without altering the input or accessing internal states. This study presents Priority Inversion via Operational Reasoning (PRIOR), a black-box, non-perturbative diagnostic framework that employs structurally biased but semantically neutral scenario cues to probe inference-level vulnerabilities without modifying pixel-level, statistical, or surface semantic properties. Given the limited accessibility of embodied vision-based systems, we evaluate PRIOR using large language models (LLMs) as abstract reasoning proxies to simulate cognitive prioritization in constrained textual surveillance scenarios inspired by Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) operations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Goal: Employee well-being surveys are essential tools used by healthcare leaders to assess workforce functioning, such as burnout, team dynamics, and perceptions of support, but surveys frequently have low response rates, which may skew results. Research on nonresponse bias is limited because of the difficulty in sourcing data on outcomes of interest from nonrespondents. This study aimed to examine whether nonrespondents and respondents differed on key outcomes of interest to healthcare leaders to understand whether results of an employee well-being survey were valid.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF