Second Thoughts Connecticut Negotiates POLST/MOLST Legislation With Consumer Protections We Can Live With

National Healthcare Decisions Day is April 16th.  I hadn’t really expected the Centers for Disease Control to be one of the leading resources for my intro on this topic, but they had quite a bit to say:

April 16th is recognized each year as National Healthcare Decisions Day to inspire, educate, and empower the public and providers about the importance of advance care planning.

This was followed by some positive bullet points about why you should “Create Your Advance Care Plan,” e.g. “Gives you and your loved ones peace of mind.”  Then the CDC says:

A Lack of Planning Has Economic Consequences

Unnecessary medical expenses for treatment, hospital stays, and nursing homes.

So advance care planning avoids “unnecessary medical expenses.”  Presumably, that would be because your advance care plan would tell medical providers not to provide some treatments.

All too often, people with disabilities and our surrogates are encouraged to decide against medical treatment.  In some cases, we’re being singled out, but the evidence suggests that most people are pushed in this direction.  The typical advance care planning presentation draws upon commonly accepted fears and prejudices about disability to steer people toward declining life-sustaining treatment.  The CDC uses a video to set the stage, beginning with the word “Imagine.”

Imagine

You’re in a hospital and you can’t speak

And soon you won’t be able to swallow or breathe.

The video goes on to paint a grim picture of illness and disability, then urges advance care planning.  I’ve summarized disability concerns about the bias in advance care planning as a problem of imbalance.  In May 2012, I gave a plenary presentation on the subject to an international advance care planning conference held in Chicago, summarizing at one point as follows:

I call the Disability Perspective a Quest for Balance because advance care planning has developed under the false premise that the primary or only problem is overtreatment of dying people. A balanced approach would also address the problem of undertreatment of people who may or may not be terminally ill. I want to emphasize that while the disability community may be most sensitive to this problem, it affects everyone who may find themselves on the patient end of the health care system.

The risk is that the bias and imbalance may produce an advance care plan that results in a denial of life-sustaining treatment that the person would have wanted if they had better information, resulting in their unnecessary and unintended death.  That risk is magnified by recent campaigns to enact legislation and programs to get people to have a Physicians Order on Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) or Medical Order on Life-Sustaining Treatment (MOLST).  While the typical advance directive requires some time and thought to apply it to a given situation, POLST/MOLST orders are immediately effective medical directives.  We’ve elaborated on our POLST concerns in public comments submitted to the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on Approaching Death.

Fortunately, there is now a role model for disability activism on POLST.  Second Thoughts Connecticut successfully resisted a 2013 POLST bill in their state, which got them to the table to negotiate a 2014 POLST bill with meaningful consumer protections.  The disability advocates, led by Stephen Mendelsohn and Cathy Ludlum, used materials developed by an attorney who’s been analyzing and blogging about POLST, Jason Manne.  Here is Manne’s summary description of model POLST legislation:

The following suggested POLST statute is intended to allow individuals to use the form to effectuate their end of life treatment preferences while including protections against abuse and the possibility of death under unintended circumstances.  It contains protections not found in most POLST laws.  The protections for patients are the following:

  • Limiting use of the POLST to individuals who have qualifying medical conditions
  • Setting standards for the POLST “conversation” to ensure that people using the form have stable treatment preferences and are not steered to reject treatment.
  • Requiring a patient or surrogate signature on the POLST for it to be effective.
  • Requiring that the patient or surrogate promptly receive a copy of the POLST, so he or she can discuss it with family members and reconsider, if appropriate.
  • Requiring mandatory reviews to update the form periodically.
  • Requiring ongoing quality control reviews in facilities that use the POLST and mandating a review of compliance with the POLST law as part of licensing inspections. 

Second Thoughts Connecticut drew from Manne’s analysis and brought other research and materials to bear to negotiate and reach a consensus with Connecticut POLST advocates for a POLST bill that is as close to a model for the nation as we have seen.

A news article about POLST and the Connecticut bill highlighted their success in reaching a balanced proposal to pilot their approach.  We hope to see positive updates in the near future.

2 thoughts on “Second Thoughts Connecticut Negotiates POLST/MOLST Legislation With Consumer Protections We Can Live With

  1. But! How will Medicare/Medicaid patients be protected from the intrinsic bias of the advanced directive that can be misused by the hospital for fiscal expediency; That is, when the hospital KNOWS that the life-saving or life-extending treatment will not be reimbursed to them under existing CMS reimbursement protocols. ALL advanced directives are biased toward shortening life by way of changing the default hospital code status from FULL CODE to something LESS and less expensive — and not to something more and more expensive. .

    Even as patients and physicians work out the MOLST or POLST in good faith, will patients be told that their desire to have a feeding tube or to be intubated or to be resuscitated might not be respected by the hospital because the life-extending procedure may not be reimbursed to the hospital/physician under existing reimbursement protocols developed the past six or seven years and continued under the ACA as part of the compromise of the Republicans and the Democrats?

    Will patients be told that an advanced directive is not required to be furnished to a hospital or a physician under federal or state law? Will patients only be told that if they don’t have an advanced directive, that they may be kept alive against their will and receive punishing treatment that they don’t want? —–which is NOW generally not true, and only true when the Hospital knows there will be reimbursement by CMS to the hospital for the treatment.

    Disappointing that HHS and CDC, and both political parties in the Congress, since the 1991 PSDA, haven’t tried to educate the elderly/disabled Medicare patients with the truth about advanced directives and their goals, which could serve the public good. Instead, since 1991, they have allowed the physicians and for-profit clinics to over treat elderly/disabled Medicare patients for the profit motive by invoking “therapeutic privilege” —all without the knowledge and informed consent of the elderly/disabled Medicare patients.

    Always, when we follow the money, we discover ugly truth!. In order to SAVE Medicare and SAVE the profits of BIG INSURANCE, Medicare’s senior partners, the elderly disabled on Medicare and Medicaid are targeted for end-of-life savings by CMS reimbursement protocols that are influenced by the private interests. The loud CALL for the advanced directives and MOLSTS and POLSTS just complements the policy already in effect and it appears that the involuntary euthanasia of the elderly/disabled and the imperfect may become accepted public policy in “the land of the free and the home of the brave.”

  2. Why is there any doubt that a POLST program is needed? When one has made peace with themselves and their deity, has made provision for an orderly disposal of their assets, has gained majority approval from close family members, no one has any right to interfere with that person’s decision to “go in peace” or their method of dying. As for the overblown fear of euthanasia, it is just that–overblown. In the very unlikely event, it does get out of hand, new legislation can modify it.

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