By: Michael Haederle | Source: AARP Bulletin Today | August 31, 2009
Advance directives are legal documents that specify your wishes if you become unable to speak for yourself. There are two types of advance directives: a living will and a health care power of attorney.
The living will is a document that tells doctors and medical professionals your wishes regarding life-and-death decisions such as whether to accept or refuse life-prolonging treatment after a critical accident. You should complete documents recognized by your state.
The health care power of attorney, also called a health care proxy, is a document that lets you appoint someone as your advocate to make decisions regarding your medical treatment and other health and personal care issues.
Source: AARP Caregiving, End of Life
The woman on the phone was worried. She had signed an advance directive specifying what kind of end-of-life care she would receive in the event she could no longer communicate her wishes—and now she wanted to revoke it.
Why? Because someone had told her that it didn’t matter what the directive said—just having a directive meant that she would not be given even the most basic care or pain relief, said Kathy Brandt, the woman who took that call. Brandt, a vice president of the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, said the woman had come to believe that she had signed away her right to medical treatment.
Advance directives do not signal the patient wants to die in pain, without any care at all. They are legal documents that specify the kind of treatment a patient would like if he is unable to speak for himself. But rational planning for debilitating illness and eventual death is an idea that seems to attract whole clusters of frightening misconceptions.
The proposal
Brandt talked to that caller a few months ago, before an obscure section of House bill HR 3200—the American Affordable Health Choices Act—seemed to take on a life of its own amid charges that the government was creating “death panels” to euthanize the elderly. Angry protesters flocked to town hall meetings where they vented their rage at members of Congress.
What the proposal would actually do is allow physicians to bill Medicare for discussing with their patients what kind of end-of-life care they would want in the event there was little chance of recovery and they were unable to decide for themselves. Would they merely want pain control or expect the doctors to try every available treatment?
Such discussions would not be mandatory, but could help patients to articulate their wishes in a living will and designate a health proxy—usually a spouse or adult child—to carry out their wishes.
Who decides?
“You can boil it down to two words: ‘Who decides?’ ” says Bill Thomas, M.D. of Ithaca, N.Y., a nationally known geriatrician who developed the concept of “green house” nursing homes—facilities that are less institutional and help patients live richer lives in smaller settings.
“The entire point of doing this planning is thoughtful communication with a physician and creating some documents that can guide your care,” he says. “It’s so you decide.”
Palliative care, in which doctors control pain symptoms without trying to treat a terminal illness, is different from assisted suicide or active euthanasia, Thomas stresses. Palliative care is what’s done “when someone’s in an end-of-life situation,” he says. “When there’s no cure available, you definitely want palliative care.”
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