Five Big Myths of Advance Care Planning and How to Stay Anchored in Reality (Audio Podcast)
by: Health Law Section of the American Bar Association
(4/13/10) | Podcast
Health Law Section of the American Bar Association Podcast Series | Free to the General Public

CLICK HERE to download and view the slides and materials from the teleconference while you listen.
Sponsored by the ABA Health Law Section, the Senior Lawyers Division and the ABA Commission on Law and Aging
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This program addresses the five biggest myths that plague advance care planning and how to steer clear of them and make advance care planning more effective.
Myths:
- People should use their state's official advance directive form(s).
- Your advance directive should include as specific instructions as possible.
- Advance Directives are legally binding so doctors have to follow them.
- Doing everything possible for dad means keeping dad alive at all costs.
- A written advance directive is better than talk.
Since the mid-1970s, health care advance directives have become the central legal tool to make sure one's health care wishes are known in a formal way and, it is hoped, followed. However, clinical realities and the medical-social sciences literature over the last 30 years cast doubt on the effectiveness of advance directives. The reality is that directives are just a part of a process of advance care planning that requires more than just a form and a signature. Sometimes forms get in the way.
Panelists:
- Richard Payne, MD, Professor of Medicine and Divinity, Esther Colliflower Director, Duke Institute on Care at the End of Life, Duke University Divinity School
- Charles P. Sabatino, J.D., Director of the American Bar Association's Commission on Law and Aging
MP3 Download Instructions
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Product Details: Produced: April 13, 2010 Audio Program File Format: MP3 Duration: 80 minutes MP3 File Size: 36 MB
Original Source page from the American Bar Association Health Law Section.
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