TY - JOUR T1 - Reconceptualizing the Experience of Surrogate Decision Making: Reports vs Genuine Decisions JF - The Annals of Family Medicine JO - Ann Fam Med SP - 249 LP - 253 DO - 10.1370/afm.963 VL - 7 IS - 3 AU - Ursula K. Braun AU - Aanand D. Naik AU - Laurence B. McCullough Y1 - 2009/05/01 UR - http://www.annfammed.org/content/7/3/249.abstract N2 - BACKGROUND We propose a reconceptualization of surrogate decision making when patients lack an advance directive stating their preferences about life-sustaining treatment. This reconceptualization replaces the current 2-standard model of substituted judgment (based on the patient’s prior preferences and values) and best interests (an assessment of how best to protect and promote the patient’s health-related and other interests). METHODS We undertook a conceptual analysis based on the ethics of informed consent, a qualitative study of how surrogates of seriously ill patients experience the surrogate’s role, and descriptions of decision making. RESULTS When the surrogate can meet the substituted judgment standard, the experience of the surrogate should be understood as providing a report, not making a decision. Surrogate decisions based on the best interest standard are experienced as genuine decisions, and the label “surrogate decision making” should be reserved to characterize only these experiences. CONCLUSIONS Physicians should identify clinically reasonable options and elicit the surrogate’s sense of decision-making burden. Some surrogates will be able to make reports, and the physician should make a clear recommendation that implements the patient’s reported preference. Some surrogates will confront genuine decisions, which should be managed by negotiating treatment goals. Requests by the surrogate that everything be done may represent a psychosocially burdensome decision, and support should be provided to help the surrogate work through the decision-making process. ER -