Literature DB >> 2000110

A prospective study of advance directives for life-sustaining care.

M Danis1, L I Southerland, J M Garrett, J L Smith, F Hielema, C G Pickard, D M Egner, D L Patrick.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The use of advance directives is recommended so that people can determine the medical care they will receive when they are no longer competent, but the effectiveness of such directives is not clear.
METHODS: In a prospective study conducted over a two-year period, 126 competent residents of a nursing home and 49 family members of incompetent patients were interviewed to determine their preferences with respect to hospitalization, intensive care, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, artificial ventilation, surgery, and tube feeding in the event of critical illness, terminal illness, or permanent unconsciousness. Advance directives, consisting of signed statements of treatment preferences, were placed in the medical record to assist in care in the nursing home and to be forwarded to the hospital if necessary.
RESULTS: In an analysis of 96 outcome events (hospitalization or death in the nursing home), care was consistent with previously expressed wishes 75 percent of the time; however, the presence of the written advance directive in the medical record did not facilitate consistency. Among the 24 events in which inconsistencies occurred, care was provided more aggressively than had been requested in 6 cases, largely because of unanticipated surgery or artificial ventilation, and less aggressively than requested in 18, largely because hospitalization or cardiopulmonary resuscitation was withheld. Inconsistencies were more likely in the nursing home than in the hospital. CONCLUSIONS. The effectiveness of written advance directives is limited by inattention to them and by decisions to place priority on considerations other than the patient's autonomy. Since our study was performed in only one nursing home and one hospital, other studies are necessary to determine the generalizability of our findings.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 2000110     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM199103283241304

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  63 in total

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2.  Medical futility: towards consensus on disagreement.

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3.  Health care directives for the elderly.

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4.  Implementing psychiatric advance directives: service provider issues and answers.

Authors:  Debra Srebnik; Lisa Brodoff
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5.  When All Else Is Done: The Challenge of Improving Antemortem Care.

Authors:  W Clay Jackson
Journal:  Prim Care Companion J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  1999-10

6.  Resuscitation in HIV.

Authors:  M C Lipman; M A Johnson
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7.  Adherence to advance directives in critical care decision making: vignette study.

Authors:  Trevor Thompson; Rosaline Barbour; Lisa Schwartz
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2003-11-01

8.  The association between treatment preferences and trajectories of care at the end-of-life.

Authors:  JoAnne Alissi Cosgriff; Margaret Pisani; Elizabeth H Bradley; John R O'Leary; Terri R Fried
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2007-09-14       Impact factor: 5.128

9.  Electronic end-of-life care registry: the Utah ePOLST initiative.

Authors:  Jeffrey Duncan; Peter Taillac; Barry Nangle; Maureen Henry; Janice Houston; Shaida Talebreza; Leisa Finch; Cherie Brunker; Deepthi Rajeev; Heidi J Smith; Christie North
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Review 10.  Inflammatory bowel disease.

Authors:  Daniele Corridoni; Kristen O Arseneau; Fabio Cominelli
Journal:  Immunol Lett       Date:  2014-06-02       Impact factor: 3.685

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