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- L Ganzini, M A Lee, R T Heintz, J D Bloom, and D S Fenn.
- Psychiatry Service, Portland VA Medical Center, OR 97207.
- Am J Psychiatry. 1994 Nov 1;151(11):1631-6.
ObjectiveThis study was undertaken 1) to test the hypothesis that remission of depression results in an increase in desire for life-sustaining medical therapy and 2) to characterize patients whose desire for life-sustaining treatment increases substantially following depression therapy.MethodElderly patients, suffering from major depression, were interviewed on admission to a psychiatric inpatient unit and at discharge about their desire for specific medical therapies in their current state of health and in two hypothetical scenarios of medical illness. A psychiatrist rated the impact of depressive thinking on the subject's response to these questions. Forty-three subjects completed the study, and 24 were in remission from depression at the time of discharge.ResultsIn the majority of patients, remission of depression did not result in an increase in desire for life-sustaining medical therapy. However, a clinically evident increase in desire for life-sustaining medical therapies followed treatment of depression in subjects (N = 11 [26%]) who had been initially rated as more severely depressed, more hopeless, and more likely to overestimate the risks and to underestimate the benefits of treatment.ConclusionsIn major depression of mild to moderate severity, a patient's desire to forgo life-sustaining medical treatment is unlikely to be altered by depression treatment. On the other hand, severely depressed patients, particularly those who are hopeless, overestimate the risks of treatment, or underestimate the benefits of treatment, should be encouraged to defer advance treatment directives. In these patients decisions about life-sustaining therapy should be discouraged until after treatment of the depression.
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