Thursday, March 27, 2008

Nevada Launches Living Will Website

Nevada joined other states offering an electronic repository for patients' advance directives and living wills:

The site is the state’s first online repository for advance directives, allowing health care professionals access to decisions about their patients’ end-of-life treatment options.

Advance directives, including living wills and Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care papers, are legal documents for individuals to communicate appropriate end-of-life care ahead of time. Advance directives are used when individuals cannot communicate this information to their healthcare provider themselves.

“Typically, people think advanced directives are an issue for older people, but this is an issue that affects everyone,” said Sally Hardwick, the center’s interim director and a lecturer for the University’s School of Public Health. “When individuals have an advanced directive, it alleviates pressure on family members to make a decision and allows the individual’s wishes to be carried out by a physician.”

Only 22 percent of Nevadans have advanced directives for end-of-life care. Further complications arise about end-of-life treatment, according to a 2002 Nevada survey of emergency medical service responders and emergency physicians, because advance directives are rarely seen by emergency room personnel.

“As an emergency room doctor with an interest in bioethics, I have witnessed patients in the hospital who are very sick and then a sudden event occurs,” Reno physician Kevin Brown said. “Having access to advance directives at the hospital is a concrete way to grant the patient’s wishes.”

We've previously posted about Oregon's plans to make it's POLST orders ("Physician Order for Life Sustaining Treatment") available electronically as well.

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1 Comments:

Blogger Bailey said...

Hello -
I just read your article about living wills and advance directives.

I wanted to let you know I am a documentary maker and hospice volunteer in Atlanta, Georgia.
I've produced a short documentary
about end-of- life decision making, palliative care, caregiving and hospice.

It's called 203 Days.
You can view it in its entirety at the following University of Connecticut website along with a study guide.

It is an unflinching look at the day-to-day interactions between patient and caregiver, in this case an 89 year old woman who is living with her daughter.

http://fitsweb.uchc.edu/Days/days.html

203 Days recently won the First Place 2007 Film Award from the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO).

If you'd like more information please go to my website
http://bbarash.com/bb_203days.htm

I hope this film is helpful to people who want to know more about some of the most common experiences for caregiver and patient at this difficult time.

Bailey Barash

March 31, 2008 4:34 PM  

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