Advance health care directive

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Template:Wills&Trusts A living will, also called will to live, is one type of advance health directive, or advance health care directive. It is often accompanied by a specific type of power of attorney or health care proxy. These are legal instruments that are usually witnessed or notarized.

  • A living will usually covers specific directives as to the course of treatment that is to be taken by caregivers, or, in particular, in some cases forbidding treatment and sometimes also food and water, should the principal be unable to give informed consent ("individual health care instruction") due to incapacity.
  • A power of attorney for health care appoints an individual (a proxy) to direct health care decisions should the principal be unable to do so.
Refusal of treatment form

As the name suggests, the term "will to live", as opposed to the other terms, tends to emphasize the wish to live as long as possible rather than refusing treatment in the case of serious conditions.

In the Netherlands, patients and potential patients can specify the circumstances under which they would want euthanasia for themselves. They do this by providing a written euthanasia directive. This helps establish the previously expressed wish of the patient even if the patient is no longer able to communicate. However, it is only one of the factors that is taken into account. Apart from the will in writing of the patients, at least two physicians, the second being totally unrelated to the first physician in a professional matter (e.g. working in another hospital, no prior knowledge of the medical case at hand), have to agree that the patient is terminally ill and that no hope for recovery exists.

In Switzerland, there are several organizations which take care of registering patient decrees, forms which are signed by the patients declaring that in case of permanent loss of judgment (e.g., inability to communicate or severe brain damage) all means of prolonging life shall be stopped. Family members and these organizations also keep proxies which entitle its holder to enforce such patient decrees. Establishing such decrees is relatively uncomplicated.

In the United States, most states recognize living wills or the designation of a health care proxy.[1] However, a "report card" issued by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in 2002 concluded that only seven states deserved an "A" for meeting the standards of the model Uniform Rights of the Terminally Ill Act.[2] Surveys show that one-third of Americans say they've had to make decisions about end-of-life care for a loved one.[3]

Benefit of advance care planning

In a randomized controlled trial the use of advance directives, including living will and power of attorney for health care, improved correlation between end of life choice and action.[4] 154 of the 309 patients were randomised to advance care planning, 125 (81%) received advance care planning, and 108 (84%) expressed wishes or appointed a surrogate, or both. Of the 56 patients who died by six months, end of life wishes were much more likely to be known and followed in the intervention group (25/29, 86%) compared with the control group (8/27, 30%; P<0.001).[4]

A cohort study demonstrated that reported depression and anxiety was lessened in families where end of life was discussed with families prior to end of life.[5]

Methods to promote advance care planning

See also

References

  1. publicagenga.org
  2. rwjf.org
  3. publicagenda.org
  4. 4.0 4.1 Detering KM, Hancock AD, Reade MC, Silvester W (2010). "The impact of advance care planning on end of life care in elderly patients: randomised controlled trial". BMJ. 340: c1345. doi:10.1136/bmj.c1345. PMC 2844949. PMID 20332506.
  5. Garrido MM, Prigerson HG (2014). "The end-of-life experience: modifiable predictors of caregivers' bereavement adjustment". Cancer. 120 (6): 918–25. doi:10.1002/cncr.28495. PMC 3947659. PMID 24301644.

External links

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