Abstract
BACKGROUND: Navigating health-related decisions after severe acute brain injury (SABI) can be challenging, especially when the patient's preferences and the prognosis remain unclear. This uncertainty adds a layer of complexity for surrogates and medical teams striving to make treatment choices. PURPOSE: To address these challenges, this article presents an interview study examining decisions that were retrospectively relevant for a surrogate decision-maker. STUDY DESIGN: Key moments for shared decision-making and advance care planning were identified and compared to a theoretical decision model, providing valuable insights for decision-making in the context of SABI given time-pressure, prognostic uncertainties, and the patient's neurological impairment. STUDY SAMPLE: A semi-structured interview was conducted with the 31-year-old daughter of a 53-year-old woman who had experienced an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. ANALYSIS AND RESULTS: The interview was thematically analyzed, and eight preference-sensitive decision moments were identified and visualized within a timeline: bleeding event, emergency treatment, intensive care unit treatment (general), severe complication, long-term life-sustaining surgical interventions, admission to rehabilitation, further severe complication, and palliation. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, this case study supports an iterative evaluation of treatment preferences and suggests well-suited moments for reevaluation of medical treatment goals and shared decision-making within a timeline. This framework may serve to facilitate shared decision-making by identifying key preference-sensitive junctures and providing a basis for designing tools that incorporate deliberate timing.