# End-of-Life Practices in an Intensive Care Unit of a Private Hospital in Mexico

**Authors:** Roberto Carlos Miranda-Ackerman, Paulina Ruiz-Ochoa, Daniela López-Ramírez, Juan Fernando Quevedo-Barrientos, Mariana Plascencia-Rendón, José Luis Landeros-Torres, Karen Fernanda Astorga-Cervantes, Alejandra González-Uribe, Ana Olivia Cortes-Flores, Carlos José Zuloaga-Fernández- del-Valle, Gilberto Morgan-Villela, Francisco José Barbosa-Camacho, Clotilde Fuentes-Orozco, Irma Valeria Brancaccio-Pérez, Alejandro González-Ojeda

PMC · DOI: 10.1089/pmr.2024.0023 · Palliative Medicine Reports · 2024-08-21

## TL;DR

This study examines end-of-life practices in a Mexican private hospital ICU, highlighting treatment decisions and patient demographics.

## Contribution

The study provides insights into end-of-life care practices and decision-making in a specific private hospital setting in Mexico.

## Key findings

- Most patients had withholding treatment, followed by failed CPR and withdrawal of treatment.
- The majority of ICU admissions were due to respiratory complications.
- No patients had acceleration of the dying process, and most were Catholic.

## Abstract

Many factors, such as religion, geography, and customs, influence end-of-life practices. This variability exists even between different physicians.

To observe and describe the end-of-life actions of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) and document the variables that might influence decision-making at the end of life.

This is a cross-sectional study performed in the ICU patients of a private hospital from March 2017 to March 2022. We used the Philips Tasy Electronic Medical Record database of clinical records; 298 patients were included in the study during these five years (2017–2022). The data analysis was done with the statistical package SPSS version 23 for Windows.

A total of 297 patients were included in this study, of which more than half were men. About 60% of our sample had private health insurance, whereas the remaining paid out of pocket. Most patients had withholding treatment, followed by failed cardiopulmonary resuscitation, withdrawal treatment, and brain death, and none of the patients had acceleration of the dying process. The main cause of admission to the ICU in our center was respiratory complications. Most of our samples were Catholics.

Decision-making at the end of life is a complex process. Active participation of the patient, when possible, the patient’s family, doctors, and nurses, can give different perspectives and a more compassionate and individualized approach to end-of-life care.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** respiratory complications (MESH:D012140), dying (MESH:D064806), brain death (MESH:D001926)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

15 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11392686/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11392686