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Crit Care Med. 2004 Jun;32(6):1284-8
Variability among hospital policies for determining brain death in adults
Powner DJ, Hernandez M, Rives TE.
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, USA.
OBJECTIVE:
In the absence of federal requirements or state statutes,
criteria to certify brain death are specified by medical
staff and administrative policies in individual hospitals.
Variability among such policies may allow inconsistency in
the declaration of death by neurologic criteria. Our intent
was to partially quantify diversity among hospital standards
used in brain death certification. DESIGN: Survey. SETTING:
Six hundred randomly selected hospitals.
PATIENTS: None.
INTERVENTIONS:
A survey was conducted of 600 hospitals randomly selected
from the American Hospital Association registry representing
200 hospitals each of <300 beds, 300-500 beds, and >500
beds. One hundred six policies submitted by these
institutions comprised the final study group. Policies were
reviewed for criteria of interest and were compared against
variables recommended by the American Academy of Neurology.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN
RESULTS: Significant
variability in policy criteria was found compared with the
American Academy of Neurology and other authoritative
standards.
Differences were greatest in specifying conditions to be
excluded before testing and in specific testing methods
during a detailed physical examination
The few differences noted between larger vs. smaller
hospitals most likely reflect greater availability of
resources in larger institutions.
CONCLUSIONS:
Differences among hospital policies for certification of
brain death may permit variability among hospitals
throughout the United States in the pronouncement of death
by neurologic criteria.
Standardization and enforcement of policies that ensure the
highest possible accuracy should be considered.
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