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1 hysician, and family member understanding of living wills.
2 CI, 0.19 to 0.56) than were subjects without living wills.
3 nce directive education on completion of (1) living wills, (2) durable powers of attorney for health
4 y 42% of patients (n = 90) reported having a living will, 46% had a medical power of attorney (n = 98
5 = .03), without significant change in use of living wills (49% to 40%, P = .63) or EOL discussions (6
6                  ACP was defined as having a living will, a power of attorney for health care, or lif
7                                              Living wills, a type of advance directive, are promoted
8 or withholding treatment was associated with living wills (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.51; 95% CI, 1
9  and highlight important differences between living wills, advance directives and other forms of heal
10 during the study period, 206 reported having living wills, all of which precluded intubation and CPR
11 icantly more common in individuals who had a living will and/or a medical power of attorney.
12 nce care planning (do-not-resuscitate order, living will, and health care proxy/durable power of atto
13                                              Living wills are associated with dying in place rather t
14         It is unclear if advance directives (living wills) are associated with end-of-life expenditur
15         This study examines understanding of living wills by patients, family members, and physicians
16 ogate-reported frequency of DPOA assignment, living will creation, and participation in discussions o
17                                              Living wills did not reflect fully patients' expectation
18 rocure organs based on a document of gift (a living will, donor card, or driver's license).
19 v 8%, P =.01) and were more likely to have a living will (LW; 41% v 11%, P =.004) than were African-A
20 ic remained optimistic, many had discussed a living will, medical power of attorney, and/or DNR order
21 ores were associated with documentation of a living will (p = .03), absence of cardiopulmonary resusc
22 ine whether each cohort understood patients' living wills regarding endotracheal intubation and cardi
23 were deemed terminal and 46 (52%) wanted the living will to block intubation even if there was a 10%
24 s and family members), 29 (33%) wanted their living wills to block intubation/mechanical ventilation
25                 Expanding the legal scope of living wills to cover individuals' organ donation prefer
26 eneral hospital wards, 17 (12%) wanted their living wills to preclude intubation/mechanical ventilati
27                                     Having a living will was associated with lower probability of dyi
28 detailed clinical information on whether the living will was consulted.
29                                Subjects with living wills were less likely to receive all care possib
30                             Subjects who had living wills were more likely to want limited care (92.7
31 % of nursing home residents in one study and living wills were reported for 67% of a random sample of

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