Families Need To
Communicate End-of-Life Wishes
January 1, 2005
Dave Ranney
Journal-World
Donna Bales, executive director of the Kansas
LIFE Project, suggests these conversation-starters:
• What do "quality of life," "heroic measures"
and "dying with dignity" mean to you?
• What kind of care would you want if you were unable to speak for yourself?
What are your hopes and fears about the medical treatments you might or might
not receive?
• What makes life worth living or, conversely, not worth living?
"It sounds morbid, I know," Bales said. "But
there is no greater gift you can give your family than letting them know what
kind of end-of-life care you want, so that when the time comes, they'll know
they're doing what you want them to do."
Bales said she had lost count of the calls from
families torn apart by disagreements about end-of-life decisions.
"No parent wants that (for their surviving
children), but it's the risk we take when these things don't get talked about,"
she said.
Also critical, Bales said, are living wills and the designation of a durable
power of attorney for health care decisions.
"A durable power of attorney for health care
decisions takes effect anytime the affected person cannot speak for themselves,"
Bales said. "A living will only takes effect if two doctors agree the
individual's condition is terminal.
"It's great to have both, but we focus on
durable power for health care decisions. Of the two, it's the more important."
Living wills and durable-power-of-attorney designations can be done without a
lawyer.

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