Feature

‘Aggressive’ new advance directive would let dementia patients refuse food


 


Janet Dwyer, 59, of New York, said her family was horrified by her father’s lingering death after a heart attack 4 years ago and mindful of a family history of dementia. When Dwyer learned there was a directive to address terminal illness and dementia, she signed it. So did her husband, John Harney, also 59.

“Judith informed me of the Option A or Option B scenarios,” said Dwyer, who opted for A. “I said, ‘Well, that is just perfect.”

Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente. KHN’s coverage of end-of-life and serious illness issues is supported in part by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Idalopirdine falls short in three phase 3 Alzheimer’s trials
MDedge Psychiatry
Full report confirms solanezumab’s failure to rescue cognition in mild Alzheimer’s
MDedge Psychiatry
APOE4 may drive tau deposition in Alzheimer’s
MDedge Psychiatry
APOE4: Elders with allele benefit from lifestyle changes
MDedge Psychiatry
No improvement in sight for Alzheimer’s drug development
MDedge Psychiatry
Aspirin may protect against dementia in T2DM
MDedge Psychiatry
Haloperidol does not prevent delirium in ICU patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Excessive daytime sleepiness linked to increase in Alzheimer’s biomarker
MDedge Psychiatry
Alcohol dependence may accelerate aging, frontal cortical deficits
MDedge Psychiatry
Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s could save U.S. trillions over time
MDedge Psychiatry