Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) Orders
In Ohio there are several legally recognized ways for you to give doctors and
other health care providers instructions about the medical treatment you wish to
receive (or do not wish to receive)—before you actually need the care.
You may have heard about advance directives such as living wills
and health care powers of attorney. Ohio law also recognizes
another tool to help you and your doctor do effective health care planning
for the end of life. It is called a DNR order.
What does DNR mean?
DNR stands for "Do Not Resuscitate." A person who does not wish
to have cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) performed may make this wish known
through a doctor's order called a DNR order. A DNR order addresses the
various methods used to revive people whose hearts have stopped functioning or
who have stopped breathing. Examples of these treatments include chest
compressions, electric heart shock, artificial breathing tubes, and special
drugs.
Under its DNR Comfort Care Protocol, the Ohio Department of Health has
established two standardized DNR order forms. When completed by a doctor
(or certified nurse practitioner or clinical nurse specialist, as appropriate),
these standardized DNR orders allow patients to choose the extent of the
treatment they wish to receive at the end of life. A patient with a DNR
Comfort Care-Arrest Order will receive all the appropriate medical
treatment, including resuscitation, until the patient has a cardiac arrest
(heart has stopped beating) or pulmonary arrest (patient has stopped breathing),
at which point only comfort care will be provided. By requesting a DNR
Comfort Care Order (DNR-CC), a patient rejects other resuscitative measures
such as drugs to correct abnormal heart rhythms. With this order, only
comfort care or other requested treatment would be provided at a point even
before the heart or breathing stops. Comfort care involves keeping the
patient comfortable with pain medication and providing bereavement care. A
DNR-CC does not mean "do not treat." Your doctor can
explain the differences in DNR orders.
Does everyone want CPR?
Although in some cases it does save lives, CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation)
frequently is not successful or does not benefit those who receive it,
especially for elderly people or those with serious medical conditions.
Even if revived, the person can be left with painful injuries, or in a
debilitated state, or with brain damage resulting from oxygen deprivation.
Resuscitation can involve such things as drugs, forcefully pressing on the
chest, giving electric shocks to restart the heart or placing a tube down the
nose or throat to provide artificial breathing. People with terminal
illnesses or other serious health conditions may prefer to "die with
dignity" instead of being resuscitated when the end comes. For more
information about the pros and cons of CPR and whether it is right for you, talk
with your doctor and, perhaps, your religious leader.
How do I make my wishes about CPR known? How do I get a DNR order?
If you do want to receive CPR when it is medically appropriate, you
don't have to do anything. Emergency squads and other health care
providers must give CPR whenever a person's medical condition has deteriorated
enough that death appears imminent. If you do not want CPR, you
always have the right to refuse it (or any other medical treatment), but most
likely you won't be able to state your wishes when an emergency happens.
Therefore, if you do not want CPR, you should discuss your wishes
with your doctor and talk with your doctor about whether it would be appropriate
for you to have a DNR order—a medical order saying that CPR should not be
given.
The doctor will explain the different ways the order can be written. Your
doctor is encouraged to use the standard DNR Identification
Form. This form is easily recognized by paramedics and other health care
workers, and can be accessed through the Ohio Department of Health's Web site at
http://www.odh.state.oh.us/.
Why did Ohio adopt a law about DNR?
Because Ohio's 1991 Living Will Law focused on patients in hospitals and nursing
homes, there was uncertainty about the circumstances under which an emergency
health care worker could act on a DNR order and honor a person's wish not to
have CPR. The purpose of the 1998 DNR Law is to help people communicate
their wishes about resuscitation to medical personnel outside a hospital or
nursing home setting. It allows emergency medical workers to honor
patients' physician-written DNR orders even if they are at home rather than in
the hospital when the heart or breathing stops. The 1998 DNR Law also
protects emergency squads and other health care providers from liability if they
follow their patients' DNR orders outside a hospital or nursing home setting.
How will the emergency squad or anyone else know I have a DNR order?
It would be wise to provide your doctor and your local hospital with a copy of
your advance directives and DNR Identification Form before an emergency
arises. If you are a patient in a hospital or nursing home, the DNR order
should be in your medical chart. You or your family also should notify the
medical staff that you have such an order any time you are admitted to a
facility or are transferred from one facility to another. If you are
receiving care at home, you should tell your family and caregivers where to find
your DNR order. You also may want to ask your doctor about getting DNR
identification such as a wallet card or bracelet that tells medical personnel
you have a DNR order.
Can anyone else override my wishes about CPR?
You have the right to make your own decisions about your health care. If
you are not able to express your wishes, other people such as your legal
guardian, a person you named in a health care power of attorney, or a family
member can speak for you. You should make sure these people know your
desires about CPR. If your doctor writes a DNR order at your request, your
family cannot override it.
What if I change my mind after my doctor writes a DNR order?
You always have the right to change your mind and request CPR. If you do
change your mind, you should talk with your doctor right away about revoking
your DNR order. You also should tell your family and caregivers about your
decision, mark "cancelled" on the actual DNR order, and destroy any
DNR wallet cards or other identification items you may have. If you have a
DNR order, but change your mind about the level of care you would want regarding
CPR and heroics, you will need a new order.
What is the difference between a living will and a DNR order?
Both living wills and DNR orders deal with end-of-life decisions, but they are
different. You may complete a living will document yourself even when you are
healthy. Your living will document specifies in advance the kind of
medical treatment you would want if and when you have a terminal illness or are
in a permanently unconscious state and are no longer able to state your own
wishes.
By contrast, you do not write a DNR order for yourself. Instead, you make
your wishes known to your doctor, who writes a DNR order if and when your
condition warrants it. The DNR order addresses your current state of
health and the kind of medical treatment you and your physician decide is
appropriate under current circumstances.
A living will may not protect you from receiving CPR or other heroics.
It only takes effect if you are in a certifiably terminal or
permanently unconscious state, and emergency squad personnel cannot determine if
you meet these conditions. A DNR order provides better protection, if you
are sure you do not want CPR or heroics.
How does a person use a living will to obtain a DNR order?
Ohio has a standard Living Will Declaration form that is widely available.
This standard form specifically directs your doctor to write a DNR order
for you if two doctors have agreed that you are either terminally ill or
permanently unconscious. Your attorney and your doctor can help answer
questions about the living will form, including the DNR issue.
How does a health care power of attorney differ from a living will?
From a DNR order?
Another kind of advance directive available under Ohio law is called the health
care power of attorney. This is a document that names another person
(usually a spouse, child, or other relative, and preferably someone who can
understand your health status and make hard decisions on your behalf, if
necessary) to make health care decisions for you whenever you are unable to do
so yourself. These decisions could range from something as simple as
whether to see a doctor to something as significant as whether to have surgery
or to terminate treatment.
Unlike a health care power of attorney, a living will expresses your wishes
directly to the health care provider and applies only if you are terminally ill
or permanently unconscious.
A health care power of attorney is not a DNR order, though it ordinarily would
permit the person you appoint to agree to a DNR order for you, if you are unable
to express your wishes at the time.
More information about advance directives is available in the Ohio State Bar
Association publication, "What you should know about . . . Living Wills and
Health Care Powers of Attorney."
Can I use a general power of attorney to address my health care wishes?
No. You may have given your general power of attorney to someone to manage your
financial affairs while you were on vacation or in the hospital. This
general power of attorney usually does not address health care issues and ends
if you become disabled.
If you want a general power of attorney to continue, even if you become
disabled, the document must state that it is a durable, or continuing,
power of attorney. A health care power of attorney is a durable
power; it continues even after you become disabled and appoints someone to carry
out your health care wishes. Health care providers will more readily
recognize your power of attorney if it is in a separate document expressly
addressing health care matters.
How are DNR orders, living wills, and health care powers of attorney used?
A living will might be used to direct a physician to write a DNR order:
Jane decides she does not want to receive CPR. She obtains a living will
form and fills it out properly. Later, Jane becomes debilitated and needs
home health care, but she hasn't discussed resuscitation with her doctor and a
specific DNR order has not been written.
One day, the visiting nurse arrives to find that Jane is not breathing. At this
point, the nurse begins CPR, because a DNR order has not been written. If
Jane is resuscitated and transferred to a hospital, her doctors may write a DNR
order, but only if they decide she is terminally ill or permanently
unconscious. Jane's living will can serve as evidence that she does not
want to be resuscitated in such a circumstance. Her doctor may write a DNR
order so that, if Jane's heart stops beating again, she will not be
resuscitated.
A health care power of attorney might be used to authorize a DNR order:
Bill decides that, under some circumstances, he would not want to receive
CPR and informs his family of this decision. He completes a health
care power of attorney form, appointing his wife to make health care decisions
for him if he is unable to do so. Later, Bill is seriously injured in an
accident and is moved to a hospital while he is unconscious. Bill's wife
shows the doctors the health care power of attorney and explains that Bill would
not want CPR if his heart or lungs should stop functioning. The doctors
write a DNR "CC-Arrest" order, indicating on Bill's medical chart that
he is not to be resuscitated if he dies, but that he should receive aggressive
medical treatment before that time. Bill receives treatment, including
medicine, a breathing tube and other resuscitative measures, until his heart
stops. At that point, the health care workers do not resuscitate him.
A DNR order alone might be used as in the following example:
John is chronically ill and decides he does not want to receive CPR, although he
wants limited medical treatment. He talks with his doctor, who writes a
"DNR-CC" order on the DNR Identification Form provided by the Ohio
Department of Health, signs it, and gives it to John.
Later, John needs home health care. John tells his family about
his DNR order and gives them a copy. One day, his daughter comes in and
finds that John is having trouble breathing. She calls
9-1-1, and shows the DNR order to the medic who arrives. The medic
transports John to the hospital, where he is treated with antibiotics for
pneumonia and is sent back home. A week later, John stops breathing.
His daughter calls 9-1-1, and again shows the DNR order to the medic.
Since John is not yet considered terminally ill, the medic may perform CPR and
transfer John to the hospital. At this point, the doctor determines that
John is terminally ill. When John stops breathing a few days later, the
medical staff will not perform CPR, although John will receive comfort
care.
Where can I get further information? Can I draw up my own documents?
You cannot draw up your own DNR order. Instead, you will need to speak
with your doctor, who can complete the appropriate forms for the order, and can
tell you how to obtain a wallet card, bracelet or other DNR identification.
You may draw up your own living will and health care power of
attorney documents, but it is a good idea to consult with an attorney about
how these documents fit into your overall estate plan. The Ohio State Bar
Association, the Ohio State Medical Association, the Ohio Hospice &
Palliative Care Organization, and the Ohio Hospital Association jointly revised
a standard Living Will Declaration form and a standard Health Care Power of
Attorney form. Although you do not have to use the standard forms, your
documents must meet certain requirements under Ohio law. You may want your
lawyer to prepare documents that are specifically tailored to your
situation. You can get the standard forms from doctors, lawyers,
hospitals, nursing homes, and others. You also may mail a request for the
forms along with $3 to the Ohio Hospice & Palliative Care Organization, 555
Metro Place N., Suite 650, Dublin, Ohio, 43017, or visit that organization's Web
site at www.ohpco.org.
2/23/2006
The information contained in this pamphlet is general and should not be applied to specific legal problems without first consulting your own attorney.
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