Important Decisions
Many important decisions can be made about the care you want to
receive at the end of life while you are active and able to communicate your
wishes. By making arrangements in advance, valuable time can be used to spend
time with loved ones.
Communicating your health care decisions
By completing an
advance directive, which documents your health care
preferences, you can help ensure your wishes will be respected if you become
unable to communicate for yourself.
An advance directive can always be changed as your personal needs
and goals change. Advance directives include:
- A
living will, which is a legal document that expresses
your wishes for medical care if you become unable to speak or make decisions
for yourself. It allows you to keep control over your medical treatment
decisions at the end of life. Check the laws governing living wills in your
state. When considering some of the more difficult end-of-life decisions, it
may help to think about what kinds of medical procedures you would or would not
want.
- A medical power of attorney (or durable power of attorney
for health care), which allows you to legally appoint a
health care agent (also called a health care proxy) to
make medical treatment decisions for you, not only at the end of your life but
any time you are unable to speak for yourself. You can and should make
decisions about your medical treatment for as long as you are able to make and
communicate them. However, when this is not possible, your health care agent
can use both the written information in your living will as well as what he or
she knows about you personally to make decisions about your medical
treatment.
For more information on choosing a health care agent and writing
an advance directive, see:
Organ donation
Organ donation is another important decision to consider at the
end of life. Many people need organ transplants because of medical conditions
such as kidney failure,
cornea disease, or
heart failure. After your death, you may be able to
donate certain organs depending on their condition. Talk to your doctor about
whether your illness allows you to be an organ donor.
If you choose to donate, your organs may be distributed to one or
more people, based on blood and tissue type, the severity of the recipient's
medical condition, how long the recipient has been waiting, and geographical
location.
If you are interested in donating, you can indicate this on an
organ donor card, a witnessed document that states your desire to donate your
organs. On this card, you can specify which organs you wish to donate, or you
can choose to donate any organ that is needed at the time of your death. Many
states allow people to designate their wishes regarding organ donation on their
driver's license.
People under the age of 18 must have a parent's or guardian's
consent to donate organs.
Even if you complete a donor card or indicate your wishes on your
driver's license, it is important to discuss your decision with your family.
After your death, your family may be asked to give consent prior to donating
your organs. For this reason, it is important to involve your family.
Organ donation will not disfigure your body, nor will it
interfere with your funeral, including plans for an open casket funeral. You
and your family will not be responsible for the costs associated with organ
donation—those costs are paid by the person who receives the organ.
Estate planning
As you make end-of-life decisions, an attorney can advise you on
how best to organize your estate so your family can handle your affairs after
your death. Also, a financial planner or social worker may be available in your
community or through a local hospital or hospice program. If your finances are
limited, some attorneys and accountants offer services at a reduced rate or at
no cost (pro bono).
Estate planning may include:
- Writing a will. If you already have a will,
it may need to be updated. If you do not make your wishes known in a will, your
state law may dictate what happens to your property when you die. Generally,
property is distributed to a spouse, to children, or if there is no spouse or
children, to other relatives. If no relatives can be found, your property may
be taken by the state. Consider appointing a person to oversee your property
after your death. This person is called an executor. Once your will is written,
keep it in a safe place, and let your executor and close family members know
where it can be found.
- Appointing someone to make financial
decisions for you in the event you are unable to do so.
- Choosing
one or more people to care for your minor children (guardianship). A
guardianship is a legal arrangement in which an adult has the court-ordered
authority and responsibility to care for a child under the age of 18 or for an
incapacitated adult.
- Ensuring your records are in a safe,
accessible place. Documentation of a life insurance policy, pension, retirement
account, or annuity should be stored in a safe place, along with bank account
information, deeds to real estate, or investment information. Close family
members, the executor of your estate, and your attorney should know where this
information is kept.
Choosing the care you want
When you are diagnosed with a terminal illness, it can be
difficult to know whether you should focus on treatment to cure your condition
or prolong your life or on palliative care to relieve pain and maintain
comfort. For more information on treatment to relieve pain and maintain
comfort, see the topic
Palliative Care.
Several factors may impact your decision about the kind of care
you want, including:
- Your illness. If you are diagnosed with a
serious illness, curative treatment options may be available. Certain diseases,
such as skin cancer, testicular cancer, and cervical cancer, are often cured
with appropriate medical treatment. Other serious illnesses, such as diabetes
and AIDS, cannot be cured but can be managed successfully for many years.
Conversely, some illnesses are more aggressive and
life-limiting.
- Your treatment options. Many medical treatment
options offer the chance of curing a disease with little impact on the quality
of your life. However, other treatments may prolong your life but may be
associated with side effects that drastically decrease the quality of your
life.
- Your age and other health conditions. Older people with
multiple health problems may be more likely than relatively healthier younger
people to choose care that focuses on keeping them comfortable rather than
keeping them alive as long as possible.
For more information on making the decision to stop curative
treatments, see:
Should I stop life-prolonging
treatment?
Talking to your health professional
When you are diagnosed with a terminal disease or condition, it
is important to communicate your preferences and concerns clearly with your
health professional. Likewise, you should expect your health professional to
communicate openly and sensitively with you and your loved ones. Your health
professional can provide information, answer questions, and advise you.
However, the decisions are yours.
Gather as much information about your disease as possible. If you
do not understand what is being said, ask questions until you do. It may be
helpful to write down your questions prior to your appointment. Important
questions to ask your health professional include:1
- What is my diagnosis?
- What are my
treatment options? What are the side effects of these
treatments?
- What do you think will happen if I choose not to treat
my illness?
- How long do you think I have to live?
- How
soon do I need to make a decision about which treatment to use (or to not
use)?
- How will my illness and care affect my loved ones?
Explore all of the possibilities with your health professional and
loved ones. Some days, you will feel better emotionally and physically than
others.
There may be times when you have difficulty understanding your
health professional. Sometimes good communication is difficult, especially when
end-of-life issues are the focus. You may be frustrated if you feel your health
professional is not communicating openly with you or is avoiding your
questions. Understanding why these problems sometimes occur may decrease your
frustration and help you to think of ways to improve communication.
Communicating bad news to a person is always difficult. Your health
professional may have provided care to you for a long time: perhaps he or she
feels very close to you. Remember that your health professional is human, and
although you want to know as much as possible about your illness, your doctor
cannot predict exactly how and when your life will end. A recent study showed
that the better a doctor knows a patient, the more likely the doctor is to
overestimate the patient's life expectancy and to delay end-of-life
care.2 Health professionals may overestimate survival
time because they do not want to believe that a patient they feel close to is
not doing well. It may be helpful to see another doctor who can give you a
second medical opinion.
Some doctors have a difficult time talking to their patients about
issues at the end of life because they view death as their own failure. Doctors
have been trained to cure illnesses and save lives, so some may feel they have
failed their patients. Communicate your goals clearly and directly.
Until recently, medical schools in the United States did not teach
about care at the end of life. As a result, many doctors may have difficulty
talking to dying people. As more medical schools address care at the end of
life in their curriculum, many doctors will learn to communicate more
skillfully with their dying patients. Seeking help from others (such as a
support group for people with life-limiting illnesses) may help you through
this difficult emotional time.
Some doctors feel they are not providing the best possible care
unless they offer the most technologically advanced treatment, such as
mechanical ventilation. Some doctors fear they may be sued for malpractice if
high-tech treatments are not offered, even in situations in which death is
certain. The best way to avoid unwanted medical treatments at the end of your
life is to think about what treatments you do and don't want, communicate your
thoughts clearly and directly, and record your wishes in writing through an
advance directive.
Your illness may prevent you from feeling well enough to talk to
your health professional. Also, your health professional may explain the
situation in terms that are difficult for you to understand. You may find it
helpful to take along a family member or a friend to your medical appointments.
Another person can help you listen as your disease and treatment options are
explained to you. Don't hesitate to take notes, if this is helpful for you. And
it's also okay to ask your health professional to slow down, if needed.
Don't be afraid to raise spiritual issues with your doctor,
especially if you have religious beliefs that affect your treatment choices.
Although you cannot expect your doctor to resolve your spiritual issues,
discussing them may help your doctor better understand your emotional
needs.
Limited time with a health professional has always been a concern
of patients (and health professionals). Prepare for your appointments by
writing down your questions and concerns and taking this paper to your
appointment. This will help you remember to address the important issues. If a
family member or friend is going with you to your medical appointment, rehearse
with that person what you want to cover during your appointment.
As your illness progresses, you may become too ill to continue
seeing your health professional at a clinic or to talk on the telephone. If you
wish to be at home as you die, it is helpful to designate only one family
member or friend to communicate with your health professional. Choosing one
reliable person to relay messages will help avoid the confusion caused by
several people trying to communicate with your health professional.
Aggressive life-sustaining medical treatment
Discuss with your loved ones and health professional how you
feel about life-sustaining treatment.
Tough choices include whether you want cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) performed on you if your breathing or heart stops. If you
stop breathing and CPR is performed, a ventilator or respirator may be used to
mechanically breathe for you. Although mechanical ventilation can prolong your
life, your remaining days may be spent in the intensive care unit of a hospital
connected to life-support equipment. You may not be fully alert and may not be
able to speak.
Talk to your health professional about your illness, specific
treatment options, and chances for recovery. Your family is an integral part of
this process; discuss your options with them and clearly state your wishes.
Some people who are facing death have strong and definite feelings about CPR,
and the decision for or against life support may be easy. For other people,
this decision is extremely difficult.
For more information on this decision, see:
Should I receive CPR and mechanical
ventilation?
Artificial hydration and nutrition
Another important treatment issue to consider is whether you want
intravenous, or IV, lines or feeding tubes to be used if you are no longer able
to take food or fluids by mouth. This is known as artificial hydration and
nutrition. An IV is a needle placed in your vein through which fluids, liquid
nutritional supplements, or medicines can be given. A feeding tube can be
either a tube inserted into the stomach through the nose (nasogastric, or NG,
tube) or a tube surgically inserted through the abdomen into the stomach
(gastrostomy or PEG tube, or g-tube). As with an IV line, liquid nutritional
supplements, fluids, or medicines can be given through a feeding tube. A third
form of artificial hydration, hypodermoclysis, involves the injection of fluids
directly into tissues beneath the skin (subcutaneous).
Talk to your doctor if you are considering artificial hydration
and nutrition. Establishing a plan for IV fluids and feeding tubes early in the
course of your illness may be helpful if you are faced later on with the
decision to pursue or forgo these treatments. Remember to communicate your
wishes clearly with your family and doctor.
For more information on this decision, see:
Should I receive artificial hydration and
nutrition?
Kidney dialysis
Deciding when to discontinue kidney
dialysis can be a difficult decision for people with
kidney failure. A person with kidney failure needs dialysis or a kidney
transplant to sustain life. Kidney failure often occurs after kidney damage has
been present for 10 years or more. It usually is caused by a chronic disease,
such as chronic renal disease or
diabetes, that slowly damages the kidneys and reduces
their function over time.
Although dialysis sustains life, it is not a cure for kidney
failure. In the United States, 1 in 4 people with kidney failure chooses to
stop dialysis and receive
palliative care only.3 Having
kidney disease means making difficult choices. Many people with kidney failure
live active, productive lives while undergoing regular dialysis treatment.
However, others do not feel as healthy and struggle with the complications of
dialysis.
For more information on this decision, see:
Should I stop kidney dialysis?