The use of advance care planning to guide decisions about artificial nutrition and hydration.

View Abstract

Advance care planning is important to ensure that patients, when competent, can influence the kind of medical care they receive if they lose decision-making capacity. Because decisions by surrogates to for-go nutrition support remain controversial, specific inclusion of artificial nutrition and hydration as a part of advance care planning has taken on growing importance. This article reviews the choices about artificial nutrition and hydration that are possible using conventional advance directives such as the living will, the instructional directive, values histories, and combination directives. It summarizes the legal basis for such documents. It also describes the ways that physicians' orders to limit treatment can help implement decisions about the use of artificial nutrition and hydration. Finally, it stresses the importance of clarifying with patients and families the risks and benefits of nutrition support in a variety of common situations such as advanced dementia and metastatic cancer as an essential prerequisite to meaningful advance care planning.

Investigators
Abbreviation
Nutr Clin Pract
Publication Date
2006-04-01
Volume
21
Issue
2
Page Numbers
126-33
Pubmed ID
16556922
Medium
Print
Full Title
The use of advance care planning to guide decisions about artificial nutrition and hydration.
Authors
Gillick MR