The Slow Code: Justified?

During a 'slow code,' the members of the healthcare team are purposely not putting forth their full efforts to resuscitate the patient by moving with no apparent sense of urgency while performing CPR. Do situations arise where a slow code would ever be justified? Nurses Safety Article

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I have been a nurse for only seven years; however, certain events and situations will remain embedded in my memory for the rest of my life. One of these events took place during my first year of nursing practice when I was employed at a long term care facility.

A 'code blue' was announced through the overhead paging system, along with the room number. Since the facility had no designated 'code team,' any healthcare employees who were located nearby were expected to respond. I dutifully ran to the room and entered a scene that was filled with disorder.

An elderly male patient was lying on the floor adjacent to his bed in a supine position. His body was cyanotic, but still warm. His nurse states that she had been chatting with him less than 30 minutes ago. No rise and fall of his chest was noted. All pulses were absent. This clinically dead man was a full code, yet the multiple people in the room were moving with a disturbingly unhurried pace. I immediately started chest compressions.

A nurse with more than 20 years of experience glanced at me with a smile and sternly said, "Give it up! Don't waste your energy! Wait until EMS gets here, then act as if you're doing something in front of them!" She ended her statement with a quiet giggle as the house supervisor stood over me, grinned, and nodded in agreement.

I continued pounding on the man's chest and could feel his osteoporotic ribs cracking with each compression. EMS personnel and the city fire-rescue squad arrived less than ten minutes later to take over the resuscitation efforts. Approximately 30 seconds before EMS staff entered the room, my coworkers began putting on the show and pretended to exert an all-out effort to save the patient (a.k.a. the 'show code' or 'Hollywood code'). Since EMS has their own documentation, I suppose my peers wanted to appear busy to avoid potential liability later on down the line.

Do situations arise where a slow code would ever be justified? Are slow codes ethical?

A 'slow code' is defined as a cardiopulmonary resuscitative (CPR) attempt by the healthcare team that is deliberately carried out in too slow of a manner for any viable chance of resuscitation. In other words, the members of the code team are purposely not putting forth their full effort to revive the patient. Some anonymous physicians and hospitalists have offered several explanations for conducting slow codes:

Quote
Three justifications for designating a "slow code" (one or more might be cited by different house officers to explain a decision about a particular case):

(a) The patient was being kept alive by technology alone and should, as a moral decision, be allowed to die;

(b) The patient had a chronic disease, which the residents found uninteresting, and from which they felt they could learn little;

© The chronic disease the patient suffered from was beyond the resources of internal medicine, and the use of technology to prolong the patient's life was a waste of time and effort.

SOURCE: Cassell, J. (n.d.). Handbook on Ethical Issues in Anthropology. Chapter 23: Slow Code. American Anthropological Association. Retrieved December 5, 2012, from Case 23: Slow Code - Learn and Teach

Although I am a firm believer in end-of-life options such as hospice and palliative care for patients with terminal prognoses, I also feel that no ethical justification exists for slow codes because they infringe upon the patients' rights to have input in their treatment plan. The slow code also serves to breach the trust that patients and families have in the healthcare team to provide swift resuscitative efforts with a sense of urgency. In summary, if the patient has decided he wants everything done, we should fulfill his request.

Specializes in Med/surg, Quality & Risk.
above quote is referring to a living will.

Your last sentence there, leads me to believe, that you yourself view living wills, as being equated to a self- full code order,(? not sure, but, seems like that is what you meant??)

Some ppl also think a living will = self DNR order.

I view a living will as being subject to interpretation by some ignorant physician (generally one not educated in the United States) as "oh they have a living will? They're DNR." Seriously.

WHATEVER YOU DO, DON'T READ THE DOCUMENT, DOC!

I view a living will as being subject to interpretation by some ignorant physician (generally one not educated in the United States) as "oh they have a living will? They're DNR." Seriously.

WHATEVER YOU DO, DON'T READ THE DOCUMENT, DOC!

yes, that could happen. With an actual living will, though, the family could, argue against what the doc has ordered (might involve getting new doc). MIght or might not be, the wisest, most compassionate thing to do, undo an DNR order, but, if the pt's living will stated they wanted to be full code, in most states, the family could use that to get a DNR undone, and have pt put back on full code status.

I can't quite recall ever seeing a doc order a DNR on a patient that we nurses thought was a crazy order. Might have happened, we can never say never...

but, i can't recall ever seeing that...

I've seen docs who refuse to make a pt a DNR, even as the pt is most obviously approaching the day that will become very pertinent....

but, the other way around, can't recall it.

Imo, is great idea to have a medical POA, too.

I had one patient who had a lawyer draw up legal papers that were signed by both the patient, a witness and the lawyer regarding her wishes to be DNR/DNI as well as a directed for no tube feeds, invasive procedures etc . The papers were in her chart under the Directives section.

However, when I looked at her advanced directives in the computer it said FULL CODE signed by the doctor and her husband (POA/medical proxy). Not only was she a full code in the LTC, she also had a feeding tube placed a couple of years prior to me being employed there. I questioned the full code order as it was the direct opposite of what the paper said. I was informed that the husband had changed her to a full code and that he wanted everything done to keep her alive. Paper work in the chart (the DNR or full code paperwork we use) was signed and dated after the DNR paper. I was told because he was her proxy he had the right to change the status. She was indeed a full code. I always shook my head..the woman knew what she wanted and had the legal papers drawn up before she became incapicitated and yet her wishes were tossed to the side by her husband and he was doing everything she specifically in the papers that she did NOT want. How is that even legal? what's the point of having all the papers drawn up, informing everyone of your decision etc and yet it can be changed when you ARE no longer able to make decisions regarding your healthcare?!

I have my health care directives with my lawyer, as well as copies that my mom, husband, best friend and sister have. I tell anyone who will listen my wishes. I even have a copy i keep in my purse. Hoping and praying my husband follows it to the letter should it ever be needed. And if he waffles, I KNOW my best friend will advocate for me and my wishes. Upon thinking about it, I just may have her become my medical proxy. Just always assumed the NOK would have final say regardless of someone else having the proxy.

I had one patient who had a lawyer draw up legal papers that were signed by both the patient, a witness and the lawyer regarding her wishes to be DNR/DNI as well as a directed for no tube feeds, invasive procedures etc . The papers were in her chart under the Directives section.

However, when I looked at her advanced directives in the computer it said FULL CODE signed by the doctor and her husband (POA/medical proxy). Not only was she a full code in the LTC, she also had a feeding tube placed a couple of years prior to me being employed there. I questioned the full code order as it was the direct opposite of what the paper said. I was informed that the husband had changed her to a full code and that he wanted everything done to keep her alive. Paper work in the chart (the DNR or full code paperwork we use) was signed and dated after the DNR paper. I was told because he was her proxy he had the right to change the status. She was indeed a full code. I always shook my head..the woman knew what she wanted and had the legal papers drawn up before she became incapicitated and yet her wishes were tossed to the side by her husband and he was doing everything she specifically in the papers that she did NOT want. How is that even legal? what's the point of having all the papers drawn up, informing everyone of your decision etc and yet it can be changed when you ARE no longer able to make decisions regarding your healthcare?!

I have my health care directives with my lawyer, as well as copies that my mom, husband, best friend and sister have. I tell anyone who will listen my wishes. I even have a copy i keep in my purse. Hoping and praying my husband follows it to the letter should it ever be needed. And if he waffles, I KNOW my best friend will advocate for me and my wishes. Upon thinking about it, I just may have her become my medical proxy. Just always assumed the NOK would have final say regardless of someone else having the proxy.

oh that's so sad. this can vary state to state, a family overriding a living will.

That's just exactly what my family would do, too, so i got a medical POA outside the family (my best pal, who is very assertive, yet, would also be compassionate in helping my family accept it all)

also, i told my family that Bev is my medical POA. Used to be my guy, til i saw how long he prolonged agreeing it was time to put down our beloved dog (who could no longer even walk and was in pain). THAT'S when i realized, he'd be even worse "putting me down", so i removed him from my POA. He understood, and was maybe even very slightly relieved, as he is no good at such things, and some doc or nurse could easily manipulate him around, he'd be putty, in THAT situation.

My point there is, a person's medical POA does NOT have to be their next of kin.

Specializes in Palliative.

The codes on poor LOL/LOM with family members in denial of their prognosis, no matter how much education you do - those haunt me. I wonder if their spirit is in the room begging us to STOP abusing their corpse.

Yeah the ones whose families want us to do everything while they pray every day that God will "take me home". Painful. Not entirely convinced that a slow code is a terrible ethical violation in those cases.

Our health region is moving away from the language of DNR altogether. We now go through advanced orders as part of the admitting process (if we can get them to do it) with patients in essence writing their own orders. There are sections pertaining to CPR, treatments, antibiotics, and nutrition specifically. They are also encouraged to designate a proxy. This paperwork follows them wherever they go in the region and can be changed at any time they want. We've gone this route because of many of the problems brought up in this thread (living wills being in legalese and disregarded, lost because they are in a safety deposit box somewhere, Doctors who don't treat etc.)

This is a little off topic, but ive also seen- RN may pronounce. So in that case, if theyre a full code, you'd perform until the rn called it, right? No ems, physician needed at that time?

Or is it only with a DNR that it would say RN may pronounce? Im sorry, im starting in a ltc facility this week so i thought id ask. Please feel free to correct me if im wrong! Thanks!!

in the hospital where I do my clinicals the nursing supervisor can pronounce, and just has to call the doc to notify...

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
This is a little off topic, but ive also seen- RN may pronounce. So in that case, if theyre a full code, you'd perform until the rn called it, right? No ems, physician needed at that time?

Or is it only with a DNR that it would say RN may pronounce? Im sorry, im starting in a ltc facility this week so i thought id ask. Please feel free to correct me if im wrong! Thanks!!

This is dependent upon the state.

I work in Texas, where the scope of practice allows one RN to pronounce death. However, individual facility policies and procedures might call for two RNs to pronounce, or for EMS personnel to pronounce, or for a physician to pronounce. However, RNs are allowed to pronounce death in the state where I live.

Specializes in Emergency Department.
Yeah the ones whose families want us to do everything while they pray every day that God will "take me home". Painful. Not entirely convinced that a slow code is a terrible ethical violation in those cases.

Our health region is moving away from the language of DNR altogether. We now go through advanced orders as part of the admitting process (if we can get them to do it) with patients in essence writing their own orders. There are sections pertaining to CPR, treatments, antibiotics, and nutrition specifically. They are also encouraged to designate a proxy. This paperwork follows them wherever they go in the region and can be changed at any time they want. We've gone this route because of many of the problems brought up in this thread (living wills being in legalese and disregarded, lost because they are in a safety deposit box somewhere, Doctors who don't treat etc.)

That's called a POLST here in California and likely elsewhere too. It goes through those points and follows the patient.

As far as having a medical care proxy, I suppose that it could be written in the proxy language that the proxy may not make decisions concerning changing DNR status... that all other therapies may be done per the proxy's orders. In effect, a limited medical POA might be set up...

Specializes in burn ICU, SICU, ER, Trauma Rapid Response.
How does that work? If someone stops breathing but has a pulse, unless you do something about it, eventually they will have no pulse. Are you supposed to just stand around and wait for the pulse to stop, then do compressions because they are not a "DNR" as well? I realize I'm being nit-picky, but this image just made me think of Peter Sellers in Murder By Death:

"Not breathing. No pulse. If condition does not change, he'll be dead!"

:roflmao:

LOL!

Seriously yes that's pretty much how it works. Crazy I know but MN is not exactly on the cutting edge of nursing practice.

This is dependent upon the state.I work in Texas, where the scope of practice allows one RN to pronounce death. However, individual facility policies and procedures might call for two RNs to pronounce, or forEMS personnel to pronounce, or for a physician to pronounce. However, RNs are allowed to pronounce death in the state where I live.
I've always been confused by what officially constitutes "pronouncing". Where I work (skilled nursing in Michigan) if I discover a dead resident I chart "resident found without pulse or respirations", I then call the on call physician for release of body order and then do all my various other phone calls and paperwork. On the paper I give to the funeral worker who picks the body up I list time of death as the time I discovered the body. I've done this a dozen times and never once did a RN lay an eye on my resident nor was a RN even consulted by telephone. Did I "pronounce" in these situations? Did the physician "pronounce" with me as his proxy when I called him for release of body order? Are we doing things right?
This is dependent upon the state.

I work in Texas, where the scope of practice allows one RN to pronounce death. However, individual facility policies and procedures might call for two RNs to pronounce, or for EMS personnel to pronounce, or for a physician to pronounce. However, RNs are allowed to pronounce death in the state where I live.

Thank you!