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Initiated: October 2001
Adopted by the WMA General Assembly, Helsinki 2003
- PREAMBLE
- An advance directive is a written and signed document
or a witnessed verbal statement whereby persons record their
wishes regarding the medical care they wish to receive,
or not receive, if they become unconscious or otherwise
unable to express their will.
- This type of document may have different names in different
countries (e.g., "living will" or "biological
wills"). The acceptability and legal status of such
directives may differ from one country to another, depending
on social, cultural and religious and other factors.
- The majority of persons who draw up such directives are
particularly concerned about excessive, ineffective or prolonged
therapeutic interventions in the terminal phases of life,
in situations where there is clear and irreversible physical
or mental degeneration.
- The WMA Declaration of Lisbon on the Rights of the
Patient states that "If the patient is unconscious
and if a legally entitled representative is not available
but a medical intervention is urgently needed, consent of
the patient may be presumed unless it is obvious and beyond
any doubt on the basis of the patient's previous firm expression
or conviction that he/she would refuse consent to the intervention
in that situation."
- RECOMMENDATIONS
- A patient's duly executed advance directive should be
honoured unless there are reasonable grounds to suppose
that it is not valid because it no longer represents the
wishes of the patient or that the patient's understanding
was incomplete at the time the directive was prepared. If
the advance directive is contrary to the physician's convictions,
provisions should be made to transfer the care of the patient
to another consenting physician.
- If the physician is uncertain about the validity of an
advance directive to terminate life-prolonging treatment,
he/she should consult family members or legal guardians
of the patient concerned and should seek advice from at
least one other physician or the relevant ethics committee.
The family members or legal guardians should be designated
in the advance directive, be trustworthy and willing to
testify as to the intention(s) expressed in the advance
directive by the signatory. The physician should consider
any relevant legislation concerning substitute decision
making for incompetent patients.
- Patients should be advised to review their advance directives
periodically.
- In the absence of an advance directive or a legally designated
substitute decision maker, physicians should render such
treatment as they believe to be in the patient's best interests.
17.9.2003
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