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How to
ensure Doctors follow your Health Care
wishes
Newswise — Years before they died, Russell George and his
wife, Dorothy, sat down with Dr. Laura
Saelinger-Shafer of Loyola University Health
System to prepare their living wills.
A living will states that in the event a person becomes
terminally ill and is unable to communicate,
he or she does not want any procedures that
would only prolong the dying process.
Americans are urged to complete living wills and other
types of advance directives.
After Russell George was diagnosed with advanced pancreatic
cancer, he died at his La Grange Park home
at age 84.
"He slipped away peacefully," said his daughter, Meredith
Onion.
The following year, Dorothy George became terminally ill
from complications from heart disease,
diabetes and Alzheimer's disease.
Like her husband, she was in Loyola's hospice program and
died at home, without being hooked up to
tubes and machines. "It was as peaceful and
dignified as it could be," Onion said.
Onion said that because her parents had prepared advance
directives, "I was never put in a position
of having to guess what they would have
wanted."
Saelinger-Shafer said it can be difficult for people to
talk about such issues, especially when they
are still healthy.
"But health care decisions are easier to make ahead of
time, when it's not a crisis situation."
Saelinger-Shafer added that patients should make sure to
bring their advance directives to their
doctors.
"If the forms sit in a drawer, and no one knows about them,
then we can't know a patient's wishes," she
said. Saelinger-Shafer is an internist with
a special interest in geriatrics, and a
clinical assistant professor in the
Department of Medicine, Loyola University
Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.
Loyola is taking the lead in educating doctors and patients
about advance directives.
Each patient admitted to Loyola University Hospital is
asked whether he or she has an advance
directive, and if so, to bring it in.
If not, the patient is given information on how to fill one
out.
Advance directives are scanned into the hospital's
electronic medical record system, and
prominently displayed on the home screen of
each patient's electronic file.
"Determining what kind of care you would want is a
fundamental patient right," said Sharon
Englert, director of patient relations.
"Loyola places a great priority on preserving and
supporting our patients' right to determine
and participate in their own care."
A living will is among several types of advance directives.
Other documents include:
There are several types of advance directives, and they all
are included in the packet Loyola gives to
patients who request them.
Health Care Power of Attorney. This designates whom you
would like to make health-care decisions for
you if you are unable to do so yourself. It
also states whether, for example, you would
like to be an organ donor or have
life-sustaining treatments.
Living Will. This takes effect if you become terminally
ill. It states that you would not want any
procedures done if they would only prolong
the dying process.
Do-Not-Resusciate Order. This states you do not want
cardiopulmonary resuscitation if your heart
stops and you stop breathing. Measures to
promote patient comfort and dignity will be
provided.
Mental Health Treatment Preference
Declaration. This states whether you would
want to receive electroconvulsive treatment
or psychotropic medicine if you have a
mental illness.
"Ideally, every adult should have an advance directive,"
said Dr. Theresa Kristopaitis, medical
director of Loyola's Center for Home Care &
Hospice.
"Even if you are young and healthy today, it is important
that you take the time to think about and
discuss your wishes with our physician and
loved ones."
Based in the western suburbs of Chicago, Loyola University
Health System is a quaternary care system
with a 61-acre main medical center campus,
the 36-acre Gottlieb Memorial Hospital
campus and 28 primary and specialty care
facilities in Cook, Will and DuPage
counties.
The medical center campus is conveniently located in
Maywood, 13 miles west of the Chicago Loop
and 8 miles east of Oak Brook, Ill.
The heart of the medical center campus, Loyola University
Hospital, is a 561-licensed bed facility.
It houses a Level 1 Trauma Center, a Burn Center and the
Ronald McDonald® Children’s Hospital of
Loyola University Medical Center.
Also on campus are the Cardinal Bernardin Cancer Center,
Loyola Outpatient Center, Center for Heart &
Vascular Medicine and Loyola Oral Health
Center as well as the LUC Stritch School of
Medicine, the LUC Marcella Niehoff School of
Nursing and the Loyola Center for Fitness.
Loyola's Gottlieb campus in Melrose Park includes the
264-bed community hospital, the Gottlieb
Center for Fitness and the Marjorie G.
Weinberg Cancer Care Center.
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