Chapter 5.A.3 (or 3.A.3) The Incompetent Patient
This page has notes for Jobes, Deciding for the Incompetent Patient, Note 5, Advance Planning, Notes 1 and 2, and Interpreting and Drafting Advance Directives, Problem 2 of the casebook.
As mentioned in the text, this case arose when Ms. Jobes' nursing home refused the request of her family to have her feeding tube withdrawn. After Ms. Jobes' husband sought judicial authorization, the trial court appointed a guardian ad litem for Ms. Jobes, and the guardian supported the family's request. The nursing home sought appointment of a "life advocate" for Ms. Jobes, but the trial court denied that request. The Public Advocate intervened as a party in oppositon to the family. After a seven-day trial, the court approved the removal of the feeding tube but held that the nursing home could refuse to participate in the removal and could require transfer of Ms. Jobes to another facility before discontinuation of feeding. When the court entered its judgment, it stayed relief pending final determination on appeal. Ms. Jobes' husband and the nursing home appealed directly to the New Jersey Supreme Court.
Deciding for the Incompetent Patient, Note 5
For an interesting case involving cardiovascular surgery on a prominent heart surgeon, with important questions about the influence of a patient's denial on decision-making capacity, the freedom of family members to override a patient's stated wishes, and the effect of a patient's fame on the care that the patient receives, see Lawrence K. Altman, "The Man on the Table Was 97, but He Devised the Surgery," N.Y. Times, December 25, 2006.
Advance Planning, Notes 1 and 2
In a Florida case, a court concluded that a living will takes priority over a durable power of attorney when the surrogate's decision would conflict with the wishes expressed in the living will. In In re Pinette, the trial court judge rejected a wife's effort to maintain life-sustaining treatment for her terminally ill husband. The husband, Harford Pinette, had executed a living will and a durable power of attorney on the same day, and he appointed his wife as his surrogate. In his living will, wrote the court, Mr. Pinette "directed that life-prolonging procedures be withheld or withdrawn when the application of such procedures would serve only to prolong the process of dying, that he wanted to die naturally and receive medication only to alleviate pain." The decision is consistent with Florida statutory law, which states that a living will takes priority over a durable power of attorney "if the two documents are in conflict unless the durable power of attorney is later executed and expressly states otherwise." Fla. Stat. 709.08(3)(c)(3).
Interpreting and Drafting Advance Directives, Problem 2
Problem 2 is an exercise designed to help you understand the human and emotional dimension of making decisions about life-sustaining treatment. You are required before the end of the semester to fill out this Health Care Power of Attorney form with a real person and write a 1 page, single spaced report about the reasoning behind the choices made and your impressions of the process.
Before having your health care agent sign any forms, you should discuss your beliefs and wishes with him or her. When instructing your health care agent about your wishes in the event you become incapacitated and they need to make health care decisions, we suggest you consider the following questions. We suggest no particular answers. Each person should answer these questions based on their own beliefs and convey those beliefs and wishes to their health health care agent. Any other wishes or desires that you feel your health care agent should know should also be given to them so that they can carry out their responsibilities as you would wish.
If, over time, your beliefs or attitudes in any area change, you should inform your health care agent. It is also wise to inform your health care agent of the status of your health when there are changes such as new diagnoses. In the event that you are informed of a terminal illness, this, as well as the ramifications of it, should be discussed with him or her. How well your health care agent performs depends on how well you have prepared them.
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