San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

State now deferring to next of kin on medical choices

- By Mark Kreidler Mark Kreidler writes for California Healthline, which is produced by Kaiser Health News, an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, where this story first appeared.

About four years ago, Dr. Gene Dorio sat on the ethics committee of a Southern California hospital whose administra­tors insisted they could decide whether to disconnect a ventilator from an unconsciou­s patient — even though the man’s wife and adult children wanted to continue life support.

The problem, Dorio told California lawmakers last year, was the hospital had the right to override the family’s wishes because the patient had not completed an advance directive or designated a power of attorney. The hospital chose to listen to the family, but under state law, his family’s wishes held no weight.

That’s no longer the case. As of Jan. 1, California joined 45 other states and the District of Columbia with next-of-kin laws that designate a surrogate to make decisions on a patient’s behalf — even if that person wasn’t specifical­ly authorized by the patient before the medical situation arose. The list includes spouses or domestic partners, siblings, adult children and grandchild­ren, parents, and an adult relative or close friend — in many cases, the people who brought in the patient for care in the first place.

“Hospitals and HMOs could usurp the rights of the families to make critical medical decisions under the law that was in place at the time — including decisions on pulling the plug,” Dorio, a geriatrics specialist in Santa Clarita and member of the California Senior Legislatur­e, told KHN. “We knew we needed a law like most other states have.”

According to data analyzed by Penn Medicine researcher­s, only about a third of U.S. adults have either an advance directive, with which they detail instructio­ns about medical care, or a medical power of attorney, which authorizes someone else to make those decisions.

The idea behind the next-of-kin law, proponents say, is to empower representa­tives to advocate for patients rather than allow a hospital to make medical decisions, which can be influenced by cost, bed space or insurance pressures.

“This law takes the pressure off the hospitals, who are being asked to render care, save lives, deal with Medicare, deal with insurance — any number of things all at once,” said Michele

Mann, a Valencia attorney who specialize­s in estate planning, including advance directives.

Patient medical rights have evolved through the years, but it is something of a mystery why the state took so long to put a nextof-kin statute on the books. When the California Senior Legislatur­e, which sponsors and lobbies for laws aimed at helping the state’s older population, approached the state’s Office of the Legislativ­e Counsel for help with the bill, Dorio said, some staff attorneys expressed surprise that such a law wasn’t already in place.

Patients without an advance directive or power of attorney have long been able to designate a surrogate, even if it’s simply by verbally declaring so while at the hospital — but that relies upon the patient being conscious.

If patients arrive at a hospital or medical center incapacita­ted or later become so, providers must make a good-faith effort to find a person authorized to make medical decisions, according to a California statute in effect since 2005. The steps include going through the patient’s belongings and reaching out to anyone the hospital “reasonably believes has the authority” to make decisions via directive or power of attorney. The hospital must show it has contacted the secretary of state to ask whether the patient had an advance directive.

With the new law in place, health care providers still must check for a patient’s advance directive or power of attorney. But once officials have determined that none exists, they can turn to the nextof-kin list, all of whom are legally authorized to speak for the patient.

“It’s groundbrea­king,” said Mann, who makes decisions for her sister, a patient with multiple sclerosis in a long-term care facility. “With the next-ofkin list, often the person who brought the patient in is a family member or close friend with a clear understand­ing of the patient’s wishes. In those cases, the hospital’s search is over — a legally authorized representa­tive is standing there.”

Some experts question how effective the new law will be, since hospitals retain the power to pick the patient’s representa­tive, especially if there are conflictin­g opinions among family members.

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