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Special Series: Tribute to J Randall Curtis
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- Special Issue in Honor of J. Randall Curtis, MD, MPH
Evolution of Investigating Informed Assent Discussions about CPR in Seriously Ill Patients
Journal of Pain and Symptom ManagementVol. 63Issue 6e621–e632Published in issue: June, 2022- Renee D. Stapleton
- Dee W. Ford
- Katherine R. Sterba
- Nandita R. Nadig
- Steven Ades
- Anthony L. Back
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 0Outcomes after cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) remain poor. We have spent 10 years investigating an “informed assent” (IA) approach to discussing CPR with chronically ill patients/families. IA is a discussion framework whereby patients extremely unlikely to benefit from CPR are informed that unless they disagree, CPR will not be performed because it will not help achieve their goals, thus removing the burden of decision-making from the patient/family, while they retain an opportunity to disagree.