Study Finds Those With Advance Directives for End-of-Life Care Get Better Treatment
A University of Michigan study on the effectiveness of advance directives (living wills and durable powers of attorney) shows that medical professionals almost always respect the wishes of people who have advance directives in place.
The study, published recently in the New England Journal of Medicine, is one of the largest ever done on the effectiveness of advance directives.
From an article on the study in the Los Angeles Times:
In a study of 3,746 deaths, researchers found that 42.5% of patients had faced treatment decisions near the end of their lives but that more than 70% of those people had lacked the ability to make choices because of their mental or physical health. Among that group, however, the majority -- 67.6% -- had advance directives.If you need more information about living wills or durable powers of attorney, contact our Jacksonville Florida estate planning law firm.Moreover, the instructions left in the advance directives were almost always carried out by surrogate decision-makers. The will of the patient, said the lead author of the study, prevailed.
"This is a big change from the early '90s, when studies reported that only about 20% of people had advance directives," said Dr. Maria J. Silveira, a clinical scientist at the Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System and an assistant professor at the University of Michigan. "I think it shows the public has bought into this and thinks it's important."
Silveira used data from the long-running Health and Retirement Study, which surveys adults ages 51 and older nationwide. In analyzing data from people ages 60 and older who died between 2000 and 2006, researchers found that of the 398 incapacitated people who had used a living will to request limited care at the end of life, almost 83% received it. Limited care was described as care in only certain situations.
Of the 417 incapacitated people who had requested comfort care in a living will, 97% received it. Comfort care was described as being kept comfortable and pain-free while forgoing extensive measures to prolong life.
