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A Prospective Study of the Efficacy of the Physician Order Form for Life‐Sustaining Treatment
Author(s) -
Tolle Susan W.,
Tilden Virginia P.,
Nelson Christine A.,
Dunn Patrick M.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of the american geriatrics society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.992
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 1532-5415
pISSN - 0002-8614
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-5415.1998.tb06647.x
Subject(s) - medicine , do not resuscitate , psychological intervention , nursing homes , emergency medicine , resuscitation orders , do not resuscitate order , family medicine , medical emergency , nursing , cardiopulmonary resuscitation , resuscitation
OBJECTIVES : The Physician Orders for Life‐Sustaining Treatment (POLST), a comprehensive, one‐page order form, was developed to convey preferences for life‐sustaining treatments during transfer from one care site to another. This study examined the extent to which the POLST form ensured that nursing home residents' wishes were honored for Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) and requests for transfer only if comfort measures fail. DESIGN : The study used chart record data to follow prospectively a sample of nursing home residents with the POLST. SETTING : Eight geographically diverse, long‐term, adult‐care facilities in Oregon in which the POLST was in use. PARTICIPANTS : Nursing home residents (n = 180), who had a POLST recording DNR designation and who indicated a desire for transfer only if comfort measures failed, were followed for 1 year. MEASUREMENTS : For all subjects: treatment and disposition after significant health status changes; orders for narcotics and for provision or limitation of aggressive interventions. For hospitalized subjects: diagnosis, medical interventions, and DNR orders. For those who died: cause and location of death, life‐sustaining treatments attempted, and comfort measures provided. RESULTS : No study subject received CPR, ICU care, or ventilator support, and only 2% were hospitalized to extend life. Of the 38 subjects who died during the study year, 63% had an order for narcotics, and only two (5%) died in an acute care hospital. A total of 24 subjects (13%) were hospitalized during the year. Hospitalized subjects' mean length of stay was 4.9 days, and the mean rate of hospitalizations for all subjects was 174 per 1000 resident years. In 85% of all hospitalizations, patients were transferred because the nursing home could not control suffering. In 15% of hospitalizations (n = 4), the transfer was to extend life, overriding POLST orders. CONCLUSIONS : POLST orders regarding CPR in nursing home residents in this study were universally respected. Study subjects received remarkably high levels of comfort care and low rates of transfer for aggressive life‐extending treatments.