chapter 16 legal issues death & dying
Harvard criteria of determining death
1. unreceptivity and unresponsivity 2. no movements or breathing 3. no reflexes 4. flat EEG Repeat all of the above tests at least 24 hours later with no change
An estimated _____ human tissue transplants are accomplished each year in the US
1.5 million
Definition of death
An individual who has sustained either: 1) Irreversible cessation of all functions of circulatory and respiratory functions (heart and lungs not working) 2) Irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem, is dead.
Wills
An individual's formal statement of wishes to give some measure of control over the distribution of property
Patient Self-Determination Act
Health care institutions that receive federal funding must inform individuals of their right to accept or refuse treatment, to execute an advance directive, & to know options available to implement these rights
Good ACP includes formulating
advance directives
Administrator
appointed by the court
Medical examiners
appointed to their positions; required to be medical doctors
Durable powers of attorney in health care matters
empower a surrogate decision maker (an agent or health proxy) to make health care decisions on behalf of an individual even when that indiv is no longer able to act as a competent decision maker
Caring for families at & after donation
explain "first person consent" offer family members of nonliving donors the opportunity to authorize the donation of human organs & tissues from the body of their loved one provide a comprehensive program of bereavement-centered care for all donor families, including opportunities for commemoration & memoralization recognize both the rights of donor families & their contribution to donation programs appropriate contacts between donor family & transplant can benefit all
Body donation
for medical education and resources, arrangements must be made in advanced
Disposition of personal property
governed by state law of decedent's residence
Disposition of real estate
governed by state law of real estate location
Holographic will
handwritten, unwitnessed
ACP should include
health care practitioners, patients, & surrogate decision makers
Estate taxes
imposed on and paid from the decedent's estate; taxes are on the transfer of property from a decedent to his/her beneficiaries, occurs before all remaining assets in the estate are distributed to heirs or beneficiaries
Inheritance taxes
imposed on individuals who receive property through inheritance
Research has shown that engaging in advanced care planning
increases knowledge without diminishing hope, increasing hopelessness, or inducing anxiety in patients with cancer. Physicians need not avoid ACP out of concern for adversely affecting patients' psychological well-being
Advance directives
instructions to be followed if one is incapacitated & unable to participate in decision making BEFORE DEATH: Living wills, durable power of attorney in health care matters, "Five wishes" document, POLST AT/AFTER DEATH: organ tissue and donations, disposition of one's body, distribution of one's estate
Major organs that can currently be transplanted
kidney, liver, pancreas, heart, lung, intestine
Executor
named in the will
NASH
natural, accidental, suicide, homicide
Death certificate
necessary for record keeping & statistical data, claiming life insurance & other death benefits, disposition of property rights, & investigation of crime Delivered to local registrar, who signs the form, records it, & provides permit for disposition of the body
Living wills are primarily intended to
refuse certain kinds of cure-oriented interventions that are no longer relevant, request that dying be permitted to take its own natural course, ask that suffering associated with life-threatening illness be mitigated with effective palliative care, even if such care should hasten the actual moment of death
Tissue donation
skin, heart valves, corneas, bone
Probate
the process of administering & executing disposition of personal property following death
Testamentary trust
trust formed under testament and carried out upon death
Organ, tissue, and body donation
two critical advances. 1. ability to classify & compare human tissues. 2. development of immunosuppressant medication
Xenotransplantation
use of animal tissue in humans
Physician Order for Life-Sustaining Treatment
voluntary, actionable, portable documents designed to ensure that seriously-ill or frail patients can choose the treatment they want or do not want & insure that their wishes are documents & will be honored signed by health care professional, can be modified any time, DO NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR HEALTHCARE PROXY
Trusts
way to avoid expense and delay of probate, transfer assets while still living
Approx ____ indiv donate tissue each yr
30,000
Living donors are ____ of all transplants
37.5% of all donors in 2016
Nonliving donors are ___ of all donors in 2016
62.5%
One donor can restore health and heal lives of how many people
75
Uniform Anatomical Gift Act
Authorizes organ donation donor rights legislation and first person consent: registries open to individuals 18 and older; decisions are legally binding and do not require additional witnesses or family consent authorization for donation by next-of-kin: donation may be authorized by health care surrogate, donor's spouse, adult son/daughter, either parent, adult brother/sister, legal guardian, or any other person authorized to dispose of the body -- in that order. speaking to next of kin requires a great amount of sensitivity
When no specific legislation covers a particular subject, what is there
Case law: precedents set by prior court decisions
When neither legislation nor prior court decisions exist, what is there
Common law: represented by definitions contained in standard legal dictionaries
Intestacy
Indiv who die without valid will are said to have died intestate ... distribution of property is then based on assumptions made by state legislators as to a typical person's wishes. with no qualified heir, the estate escheats or passes to the state
Who can donate?
Living donors -- may be directed or nondirected Advantages? medical history is known, consent is directly from donor, organ is out of body for a short period of time
Medicare
NOW accepts billing from primary health care practitioners for engaging in ACP regarding EOL care & patient preferences
Uniform Determination of Death Act
Speaks of an individual not a person; requires irreversible cessation of the designated functions; recognizes the possibility of situations in which external interventions mask the precise status of respiratory and circular functions; requires evaluation of the capacities of the central nervous system; concludes that irreversible cessation of all functions of the brain & brain stem is the condition understood as death
The Conversation Project developed what
Starter Kits for adults, children, and those w/ Alzheimer's to initiate & help facilitate discussions about EOL care wishes
For most issues related to death, dying, & bereavement:
State law governs what is to be done and how it is done as a result, different laws and procedures may apply in different states some states might not have legislation on a given subject
Living trusts
Usually set up for the benefit of the trustor in case he/she is incapacitated and unable to act on his/her own behalf
"Five Wishes"
combines the best elements of living wills & durable power of attorney in health care matters in a simple, practical way. asks the person to express desires and provide guidance regarding: his/her health care surrogate, medical treatments, pain management and comfort care, treatment by others, what he/she wishes loved ones to know
Coroners are _____
elected into office
