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- Essay Name : 1274.txt
- Uploader : Alesha M. Johnson
- Email Address : raworley@knights.farmington.k12.mo.us
- Language : English
- Subject : Health
- Title : Holistic Care. Are we treating the Patient or the condition?
- Grade : 100%
- School System : College
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : Very time consuming
- Teacher Comments : Well organized.
- Date : 11/20/96
- Site found at : Desperation
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-
-
- Holistic Care: Are we Treating the Patient or the Condition?
- Alesha M. Johnson, R.N.
- Jewish Hospital College of Nursing
- and Allied Health
- Nursing 4600
- Conceptual Approach to Acute Care
- October 8, 1996
-
-
- Holistic Care: Are we Treating the Patient or the Condition?
- In today's fast-paced world where technology rules, the medical profession is also
- advancing. In 1991, 2,900 liver transplants were performed in the United States while there
- were 30,000 canidates for the procedure in the United States alone (Heffron, T. G., 1993).
- Due to shortages of available organs for donation/transplantation, specifically livers, once again
- science has come to the rescue.
- Although the procedure is fairly new in the United States, the concept of living organ
- donation is fast growing. Living related liver transplantion was first proposed as a theoretical
- entity in 1969 but it was not until almost twenty years later that the procedure became a clinical
- reality (Heffron, T. G., 1993). Living related liver transplants have mainly been performed in
- the United States and Japan until recently. In 1991 Europe began trying to institute the
- procedure. The first transplant of this type took place in 1989 (Broelsch, C. E., Burdelski, M.,
- Rogiers, X., Gundlach, M., Knoefel, W. T., Langwieler, T., Fischer, L., Latta, A., Hellwege,
- H., Schulte, F., Schmiegel, W., Sterneck, M., Greten, H., Kuechler, T., Krupski, G.,
- Loeliger, D., Kuehnl, P., Pothmann, W., & Schulte Am Esch, J., 1994). This concept still has
- many areas that have not yet been explored in depth and there are sensitive issues involved that
- need to be addressed.
- Live organ donation came about as a means to solve the problem of the absence of a
- donor. Many people die every year while waiting for a donor organ and many others suffer
- because of complications linked to finding a suitable donor. Before live organ donation most
- available organs were harvested/transplanted from cadavers. This procedure has problems of its
- own. Complications include: (a) suitable match, (b) legalities, (c) family not wanting to donate
- organs, and (d) time. With live organ donation a suitable match should be easier to obtain and
- time should be able to be controlled to some extent. With live organ donor transplantation,
- "...the organ-damaging hemodynamic instabiility associated with the death of the donor is
- avoided, and the coordinated scheduling of operations in the donor and recipient holds ex vivo
- organ ischemia to a minimum" (Singer, P. A., Siegler, M., Whitington, P. F., Lantos, J. D.,
- Emond, J. C., Thistlethwaite, J. R., & Broelsch, C. E., 1989, p. 620).
- Prior to receiving a donor organ, recipients may be experiencing a variety of signs and
- symptoms related to their disease process. These can include: (a) jaundice, (b) ascites, (c) GI
- bleed, (d) ECG changes, (e) malaise, (f) encephalopathy, (g) body image changes, and (h)
- fluid and electrolyte imbalances. Disease process is specific to the individual. Once the need for
- transplant has been established the search for a donor can begin.
- There are a multitude of steps involved in the procedure. Some of these include: (a)
- evaluation to determine the need for transplant, (b) search for a suitable donor who is willing to
- donate, (c) evaluation of the donor, (d) obtaining the proper consent, and (e) mapping out the
- plan of care for both donor and recipient. Due to legalities and ethical conflicts, the acceptance
- of live organ donor transplantation is questionable. Those families and volunteer participants
- must meet several criteria in order to be considered for a live liver donor. Once someone
- decides that they want to be a donor they must first under go a medical and psychiatric
- evaluation.
- The medical portion of the evaluation includes: (a) compatible blood type, (b) no
- history of liver disease, (c) normal results of liver function tests, (d) appropriate size of left
- liver lobe on CT scan, (e) no vascular anomalies on hepatic arteriography, and (f) low
- operative risk.
- The psychiatric portion of the evaluation must find that the donor is at low risk for
- psychological decompensation and involves obtaining informed consent. Donor's consent can
- be influenced by three areas, these include: (a) internal pressure, (b) external pressure, and (c)
- urgency of medical situation. All institutions have their own individual protocols for obtaining
- consent but many do require a wait period between consent and procedure. This provides the
- donor with time to change their decision, and after all these areas have been addressed the
- donor and recipient are prepared for surgery.
- The procedure involves donation of the left lateral lobe, which is the safest anatomical
- resection (Jones, J., Payne, W. D., & Matas, A. J., 1993). The surgeries are performed
- simultaneously and may take several hours depending upon the experience of the transplant
- team and the possibility of complications. Common complications include: (a) arterial
- thrombosis, (b) bile leaks, (c) infection, and (d) stricture at the biliary enteric anastomosis
- (Wise, B. V., 1994).
- During the post-operative stage all normal nursing duties apply but there are also
- specific things that nurses need to be aware of and look for. Because of the location of the liver
- some patients may experience some degree of pulmonary compromise post-operatively. Liver
- function needs to be monitored by assessing lab results, liver enzymes, bilirubin, and bile
- production. All drains should be assessed for quantity and color. Fluid volume status and intake
- and output also need to be carefully monitored. PT/PTT coagulation factors are also a sensitive
- indicator of graft function and can be expected to normalize in the first few days after
- transplant (Wise, B. V., 1994).
- The transplanted segment of the liver will regenerate to a standard liver volume,
- regardless of size at transplantation, within four to six months following the procedure. Normal
- liver enzymes have been documented within six weeks of the procedure (Wise, B. V., 1994).
- Organ donation alone is an area where the nurse plays an important role but with the
- advances of living organ donation the role has expanded and many nurses are not prepared to
- play the part. When comparing living donor organ transplantation to the age old means of
- organ harvesting/transplantation from cadavers, the differences are many. Cadaver organs are
- usually shipped out , this meant that there was one nurse and support system with the grieving
- family while there was another nurse and support system with the recipient and family. The
- role is far from being black and white and now with living organ donors it weaves an even
- greater web. Now the nurse is dealing with a patient who may be facing eminent death without
- a transplant, a concerned family who may be experiencing anticipatory grieving stages and a
- living organ donor who may or may not be related who also faces possible complications and
- maybe even death. Then add in all the legalities and rules and you have one big mess.
- Support systems will be a key factor in this web. All those involved will be facing
- challenges and questions unique to them. Nurses must remember that when caring for the
- patient's condition, they must not forget to also care for the patient and family. Isn't that what
- holistic nursing care is all about? We must care for the patient as a whole and this would
- include the patient's family. Nurses need to assess: (a) psychosocial needs, (b) functional
- outcomes, (c) quality of life, (d) daily living, (e) psychiatric outcome, and (f) financial needs.
- The nurse must use skills in crisis intervention to help ease the disequilibrium of the family.
- Nurses need to be sensitive to patient and family needs. Nurses must help the patients
- and their families to cope with: (a) disease chronicity, (b) waiting period, (c) role reversal, (d)
- hospitalization, and (e) complicated medical regimen as well as take into consideration the
- demands on: (a) time, (b) energy, (c) finances, and (d) relationships that the disease has placed
- on patients and their families. The burdens and challenges that this crisis places on patients and
- their families are many. These can also include: (a) the uncertantity of rejection, (b) the
- uncertantity of future health and well-being, (c) social isolation, (d) financial burdens, (e)
- possible organ failure, (f) increased risk of two family members undergoing surgery, and (g)
- feelings of guilt from non-donating persons or family members (Ganley, P. P., 1995).
- As transplant moves into the critical care setting, nurses are going to have to be
- prepared for optimal management of donors, canidates, and recipients. They need to optimize
- patient outcomes through extended knowledge bases and education about:: (a) the procedure,
- (b) the human immune response, (c) the pharmacology of immunosuppression, and (d)
- physiological and psychologic and behavior responses to transplantation (Smith, S. L., 1993).
- Nurses need to continue to be patient advocates. We need to encourage
- communication, allow families to ventilate anger, fear, and guilt and to educate patients and
- families about what to expect. Nurses need to remember when designing care paths and
- nursing diagnosis that it is important to include the necessary ones related to the patients
- condition such as, potential for infection related to interrupted skin integrity, which is the
- nursing diagnosis that the current nursing research is focused on; but we also need to include
- nursing diagnoses that focus on the patient and family as a whole. A key nursing diagnosis
- would be anxiety secondary to knowledge deficit about liver donation/transplantation. We need
- to educate patients and their families and take the time to answer their questions and listen to
- their fears and concerns. All too often nurses get caught up in the machines that are taking care
- of the patient's condition but we must remember that there is no machine that can care for the
- patient and family, only the human response and caring of a nurse can preserve the "person".
- There are still many ethical issues that surround living donor organ transplantation.
- Issues that arise include: (a) risks versus benefits, (b) selection of donor and recipient, and (c)
- informed consent. The largest risks to recipients include: (a) organ rejection, (b) organ failure,
- and (c) possible death. Benefits to recipients include a normal life or closer to normal life. Risks
- to donors include: (a) partial hepatectomy, (b) complications, and (c) possible death. Benefits
- to donors include psychological benefits and the degree depends upon the relationship between
- donor and recipient (Singer, P. A. et. al., 1989).
- Arguments for living donor organ transplantation include: (a) reduction of pre-
- transplant mortality, (b) provides a new source of livers for transplantation, (c) allows the
- transplant to be performed before the recipient's condition deteriorates from complications, (d)
- immunologic advantage, and (e) fulfills powerful motivation of parent/other to participate
- (Lynch, S. V., Strong, R. W., & Ong, T. H., 1992). Arguments against living donor organ
- transplantation include: (a) may be uneccessary, (b) frequently require retransplant from
- cadaver source, and (c) poses unknown risk to donor (Lynch, S. V., et. al., 1992). But most
- medical decisions are based on the question of whether or not the risks outweigh the benefits
- and in the case of living donor organ transplantation, the decision should be made on an
- individual basis but keep in mind that, "...when a donor is genetically and emotionally related to
- the recipient, the intangible benefits of saving a life are most rewarding, and the risk-benefit
- ratio is most favorable" (Singer, P. A., et. al., 1989, p. 621).
- Although the procedure of living donor organ transplantation is truly a controversial
- issue, the nursing care of these patients and their families has not been well documented. The
- medical documentation and research on the actual procedure has been minimal and the little
- nursing research that is out there is out-dated and incomplete. Because of the specialty of
- transplantation and the uniqueness of the procedure there is a need for more research and
- detailed information in order for all nurses and health care providers to provide optimal care to
- patients and their families who are experiencing living donor organ transplantation.
- Since living donor organ transplantation will probably become a more common
- procedure, research and knowledge related to the topic will help nurses better function in their
- role as caregiver and patient advocate. Therefore we need to continue searching for the
- answers and better ways to optimize patient outcomes.
- Although I have not experienced this clinical concept in my nursing practice, I am
- currently experiencing it in my personal life. I have found that it is sometimes complicated to
- separate one's nursing skills and behaviors from one's personal feelings. I was disappointed in
- my search for information related to living donor organ transplantation. It is also disheartening
- that nurses in this field have not tried to educate their fellow nursing professionals in this area
- of study.
-
-
- References
-
- Broelsch, C. E., Burdelski, M., Rogiers, X., Gundlach, M., Knoefel, W. T.,
- Langwieler, T., Fischer, L., Latta, A., Hellwege, H., Schulte, F., Schmiegel, W., Sterneck, M.,
- Greten, H., Kuechler, T., Krupski, G., Loeliger, C., Kuehnl, P., Pothmann, W., & Schulte Am
- Esch, J.. (1994). Living donor for liver transplantation. Hepatology, 20 (1), 495-555.
- Ganley, P. P.. (1995). Living related liver transplantation (LRLT) in children: Focus
- on issues. Pediatric Nursing, 21 (6), 523-525.
- Heffron, T. G.. (1993). Living-Related pediatric liver transplantation. Seminars in
- Pediatric Surgery, 2 (4), 248-253.
- Jones, J., Payne, W. D., & Matas, A.. J.. (1993). The living donors- Risks, benefits,
- and related concerns. Transplantation Reviews, 7 (3), 115-128.
- Lynch, S. V., Strong, R. W., & Ong, T. H.. (1992). Reduced-size liver transplantation
- in children. Transplantation Reviews, 6 (89), 115-128.
- Singer, P. A., Siegler, M., Whitington, P. F., Lantos, J. D., Emond, J. C., Thistlewaite,
- J. R., & Broelsch, C. E.. (1989). Ethics of liver transplantation with living donors. The New
- England Journal of Medicine, 321 (9), 620-621.
- Smith, S. L. . (1993). The cutting edge in organ transplantation. Critical Care Nurse,
- supp. June, 10-30.
- Wise, B. V. . (1994). Advances in pediatric solid organ transplantation. Nursing Clinics
- of North America, 29 (4), 615-629.
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