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- A B Sanders.
- Department of Surgery, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, Tucson, USA.
- Emerg. Med. Clin. North Am. 1999 May 1;17(2):519-26, xiii.
AbstractDifferent types of advance directives invite varying interpretation from emergency care professionals. As informed consent of a patient is not always possible to procure in emergency situations, advance directives can provide useful guidelines for clinicians' decision-making processes regarding individual patient care. Specifically communicated instructions establish a course of aggressive or nonaggressive treatment, while general wishes leave the emergency department physician to assume an innate understanding of individual patients while undertaking an active role in decision-making for that patient's care. This article explores the relationship between advance care directives and the emergency department.
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