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It is important that patients have an early conversation with their physicians and trusted caregivers about health care wishes at the end of life. Known as advance care planning, this discussion and decision-making involves designating a trusted person as your health care agent by completing a health care proxy form. Knowledgeable about your medical situation and your goals, values and wishes, this person has the authority to make health care decisions that support your treatment wishes and personal beliefs if you are too sick or hurt to express your wishes yourself.
Communicating end-of-life wishes to loved ones, appointing a healthcare agent, and addressing financial issues such as wills and paying for care are some of the important issues you can address today to plan ahead.
Palliative Care Nurse Practitioner Catherine Duffy writes about the importance of advance care planning.
Read moreThis episode of Timing is Everything includes discussion on health care proxy, power of attorney and other health directives.
An advance directive is a legal document that describes the type of medical care you want to receive if you become unable to make medical decisions yourself.
The Massachusetts Health Care Proxy form is a legal document that lets you name someone to make decisions about your medical care—including decisions about life support—if you can no longer speak for yourself. It goes into effect when your doctor determines you cannot communicate your health care decisions. A medical power of attorney (or healthcare proxy) allows you to appoint a person you trust as your healthcare agent (or surrogate decision maker), who is authorized to make medical decisions on your behalf.
A personal directive or living will describes what type of future medical treatment you want or don’t want when you are seriously ill. Living wills are not legally binding in Massachusetts. However, they may be used together with a Massachusetts Health Care Proxy form to guide family members and doctors about how aggressively to use treatments to delay death.
MOLST is a medical order and written instructions about certain life-sustaining medical treatments, from a physician, nurse practitioner or physician assistant to other helath professionals (e.g. 911 emergency responders, nurses) based on the patient's stated preferences. The MOLST form includes instructions about resuscitation and other life-sustaining measures. And, unlike a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order, the MOLST form can be used to refuse or request treatment. These decisions can be changed at any time to reflect current wishes.
In this podcast, hosts Lyn and Mary tackle the challenges of starting a conversation about death, dying, and making your wishes known.
More Podcasts HereA step-by-step process listing the important conversations and planning tools you need to get health care you want over your lifetime
Continue readingHere's how you can be in more control about medical treatments you would or would not want if you were unable to express your health care wishes yourself.
Continue readingA retired hospital nurse asks, since death is unavoidable, why not have some control over how it happens if you can?
Continue readingA Care Dimensions hospice volunteer recalls how a special day with her mother inspired her to complete advance directives about her end-of-life wishes.
Continue readingThe COVID-19 pandemic opened a lot of eyes about advance care planning, yet many U.S. adults have not completed advance directive documents or had conversations with family and health care professionals about medical care preferences.
Continue readingAnyone—patient, family, care provider—can make a referral. Fill in the form online or call us today.
Since 1978, Care Dimensions, formerly Hospice of the North Shore, has provided comprehensive and compassionate care for individuals and families dealing with life-threatening illnesses. As the non-profit leader in advanced illness care, we offer services in over 100 communities in Massachusetts.
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