• Crit Care Resusc · Jun 2009

    The influence of medical enduring power of attorney and advance directives on decision-making by Australian intensive care doctors.

    • Charlie Corke, Sharyn Milnes, Neil Orford, Margaret J Henry, Claire Foss, and Deborah Porter.
    • Intensive Care Unit, Geelong Hospital, Geelong, VIC. charliec@barwonhealth.org.au
    • Crit Care Resusc. 2009 Jun 1;11(2):122-8.

    ObjectiveDespite government encouragement for patients to make advance plans for medical treatment, and the increasing numbers of patients who have done this, there is little research that examines how doctors regard these plans.DesignWe surveyed Australian intensive care doctors, using a hypothetical clinical scenario, to evaluate how potential end-of-life treatment decisions might be influenced by advance planning - the appointment of a medical enduring power of attorney (MEPA) or an advance care plan (ACP). Using open-ended questions we sought to explore the reasoning behind the doctors' decisions.Results275 surveys were returned (18.3% response rate). We found that opinions expressed by an MEPA and ACP have some influence on treatment decisions, but that intensive care doctors had major reservations. Most did not follow the request for palliation made by the MEPA in the hypothetical scenario.ConclusionsMany intensive care doctors believe end-oflife decisions remain medical decisions, and MEPAs and ACPs need only be respected when they accord with the doctor's treatment decision. This study suggests a need for further education of doctors, particularly those working in intensive care, who are responsible for initiating and maintaining life support treatment.

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