Title: Advance Health Care Planning and Organ and Tissue
1Advance Health Care Planning and Organ and Tissue
Donation What You Need to Know
2What is an advance medical directive?
- Allows you to retain control over whether your
life will be prolonged by certain medical
procedures if you have a medical condition that
will result in death in a short period of time - Documents your wishes in advance if you are
unable to speak for yourself - Two main documents health care power of
attorney and living will
3What is a Health Care Power of Attorney (HCPOA)?
- Legal document
- Grants your health care agent the power to make
medical decisions for you if you are not
competent or if you are not able to communicate
your wishes. - Can also give agent ability to make organ and
tissue donations following your death. - Completely Voluntary -No legal requirement to
execute a HCPOA
4What is a living will
- Written Document
- Sets forth your wishes to withhold or withdraw
life-prolonging measure in certain situations - Completely Voluntary -No legal requirement to
execute a living will
5NC Passes SL 2007-502
- In response to the Terri Schiavo case, the NC
- Bar Association,
- Medical Society,
- Hospital Association,
- Health Care Facilities Association and
- Carolinas Center for Hospice
- began a work group to draft clarification of NC
living will and health care POA law - House Bill 634 was drafted
6Revisions of NC Laws
- New Living Will form
- New HCPOA form
- New MOST form- physician order
- Informed consent law- clarification of order of
who can consent - Effective October 1, 2007
- Old forms remain valid
7Living Wills When do they apply?
- Old triggering standards
- ? Terminal and incurable
-
- or
-
- ? Persistent Vegetative state
-
8Living Wills When do they apply?
- New Triggering standards
- An incurable or irreversible condition
- that will result in death within a
- relatively short period of time
- OR
- Unconscious and to a high degree
- of medical certainty, will never regain
consciousness OR - Suffers from advanced dementia or any other
condition resulting in the substantial loss of
cognitive ability and that loss, to a high degree
of medical certainty, is not reversible
9Living Wills- What do they direct?
- New Law-
- Withdrawal of life-prolonging measures
- ? Interventions which
- serve only to artificially postpone
- the moment of death by sustaining,
- restoring or supplanting a vital
- function, including mechanical
- vent., dialysis, antibiotics,
- artificial nutrition hydration, etc.
- (basically unchanged)
10MOST Form
- Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment (MOST)
- MOST vs. DNR
- MOST vs. Advance Directives
- Doctor and Patient/Patient Rep signs
- Medical order instructs other medical providers
what level of care to provide to patient - TRUMPS LIVING WILL HCPOA
11MOST Form
- Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment
- Physician order sheet based on
- Patients medical condition
- Patients wishes
- Similar to Portable DNR
- travels with PT
- EXCEPT
- Includes greater detailed
- wishes, including the right
- to request CPR
- Must be signed by MD and PT or PT Agent
- Must be updated at least once a year
12When is MOST Appropriate?
- Terminal illness
- Advanced disease
- Prognoses is death
- within a year
- Debilitating chronic
- progressive illness
13Purpose of MOST
- Improve implementation of advance care planning
by - Communicating patients preferences for end of
life care treatment across treatment settings - Encouraging discussion of wishes among patient,
doctor, - family, or surrogate
14Benefits of MOST
- Promotes patient autonomy by documenting
treatment preferences and converting them into MD
orders - Clarifies treatment intentions and
- minimizes confusion regarding
- patients preferences
15The Health Care Power of Attorney
- Section 5
- Is more specific in allowing you to express
special provisions and limitations - Options to limit authority
- regarding hydration and nutrition
- mental health care decisions
- Individual limitations important to you
- Autopsy and disposition of remains
16The Health Care Power of Attorney
- Section 6
- You may grant authority to donate organs/body
17The Health Care Power of Attorney
- Section 7- Guardianship Provisions
- - You nominate your health
- care agent as guardian
- - Guardian must follow
- GS 35A-1201(a)(5)
-
18Health Care Agent vs. Guardian
- Old Law
- Guardian trumped HC Agent.
- Once guardian appointed,
- HCPOA ceased to be effective.
- New Law
- HCPOA still effective and
- HC agent still has authority
- UNLESS
- Guardian petitions Ct and Ct rules in Guardians
favor
19What authority is given to the agent for organ
and tissue donation?
- No authority is given unless you indicate you
desire - Authority may be given for
- Any needed organs or parts
- Only certain organs or parts
- Body for anatomical study
- You may also insert special limitations regarding
such donations.
20Why is this important?
- Right Now Nearly 3000 people waiting for an
organ transplant in North Carolina - Thousands of people die each year in the United
States awaiting a suitable donor organ
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23Organ Donation Myths
- Im too old to be an organ donor.
- They wouldnt want my organs I have too many
medical problems. - They only take hearts, kidneys and livers and
mine arent good! - It the doctors or the hospital knew I was an
organ donor, they might not help me or save my
life if they know they can get my organs.
24Organ Donation Myths
- I cant have an open casket funeral if I am an
organ donor. - It will cost my family or my estate too much if
I am an organ donor. - Its against my religion.
25The Donor Registry
26Current state of registry
- There are 3.3 million drivers in registry.
- Most believe this is a legal consent for
donation. - The heart symbol indicates DONOR, not just
heart donor. - Registries and laws are different in every state.
27HB1372 The Heart Prevails
- Legislation introduced in April 2007 by donor dad
and Rep. Dale Folwell (R- WS) - Leg. Adopted from UAGA.
- HB1372 creates a first person consent registry.
- Law became effective October 1, 2007.
28HB1372 The Heart Prevails
- Heart on the license places one into DMV donor
registry. - Heart on license is LEGAL first person consent
NEXT OF KIN CAN NOT OVERRIDE. - Those already in registry are grandfathered.
- Registry database is confidential only OPOs and
Eye Banks are granted access. - Donor cards are still legal consent, but there is
no database for them.
29HB1372 The Heart Prevails
- The heart symbol/registry indicate legal consent
for ORGAN and EYE donation only NOT TISSUE. - Registry gives consent for research
- Those under 18 NEED NEXT OF KIN CONSENT (unless
emancipated) - Families will always be notified of loved ones
wishes, med/soc. History.
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32Registry for Advance Directives
- NC Secretary of States Office
- Internet Accessible
- statewide listing
- on-line access to documents
- www.sosnc.com
- N.C.G.S.130A-465 to 130A-471
33Documents on the Registry
- Four Types of Documents may be filed in The
Statewide Registry - Declaration of a Desire for a Natural
Death-Living Will - Health Care Power of Attorney
- Advance Instruction for Mental Health Treatment
- Anatomical gift - organ donation
34How the Registry Works
- Registry is entirely voluntary
- Confidential- need the document number and
password to view the directives on-line - Original documents are returned to each
registrant, along with a wallet-sized card
containing a case-specific file number and
password - 10 fee per document
35For More Information
Legal Information and Advice
36Hospice and End of Life Care Planning
- www.carolinasendoflifecare.org
37- Information about Organ, Tissue and Eye Donation
-
www.carolinadonorservices.org
www.lifesharecarolinas.org
38Information about Services for Adults and Seniors
in your Community
www.ncdhhs.gov/aging