Dear Mr. Perez:
You requested an attorney general's opinion on several questions dealing with the use of a model or form known as the "Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment" (POLST) to be used for end-of-life care in Louisiana. You explain that POLST is a document designed to help health care providers honor the treatment wishes of their patients by transferring the patient's wishes for end-of-life care to a doctor's order. You further explain that a POLST is a voluntary document and is not intended to replace an advance directive but that, nevertheless, it is based on a declaration that complies with R.S.
More specifically, you ask the five following questions concerning a POLST:
*Page 21. Whether the POLST model can be implemented in Louisiana without legislative action.
2. Whether a POLST must bear the signatures of two physicians.
3. Whether a POLST that is based on an oral declaration must bear the signature of two witnesses.
4. Whether a POLST can be followed by an attending physician independent of another physician's presence.
5. Whether the immunity provision set forth in R.S.
40:1299.58.8 extends to physicians who follow a POLST.
In addition, you enclosed some sample POLST forms for our information.
We must begin with the most fundamental principle intended to be implemented by all these devices and paradigms and always keep it foremost in mind; such principle was set forth by the legislature as follows: "The legislature finds that all persons have the fundamental right to control the decisions relating to their own medical care," R.S.
"B. Any attending physician who refuses to comply with the declaration of a qualified patient or declaration otherwise made pursuant to this Part shall make a reasonable effort to transfer the patient to another physician."
"D. If the policies of a health care provider preclude compliance with the declaration of a qualified patient under this Part or preclude compliance with the provisions pertaining to a representative acting on behalf of a qualified patient, then the provider shall take all reasonable steps to transfer the patient to a provider with which the provisions of this Part can be effectuated."
Another fundamental principle in law that must be always kept in mind regarding medical treatment is that the patient's consent must be a fully and properly informed consent. His attending physician must try to resolve anomalies, clarify confusion, and *Page 3
explain the details of the situation so that the patient knows exactly what he is consenting to. For example, the Second Circuit Court of Appeal in Pettis v. Smith, 39,295 (La.App. 2 Cir. 8/13/04),
With these basic understandings, we can proceed to your specific questions:
As to your first question, we do not think that the statutes have to expressly provide all the means whereby one can accomplish the fundamental principles and goals of medical treatment. Indeed, R.S.
Taking your fifth question out of order, our reading of R.S.
One of the requirements we think the legislature intended for the actual implementation and effectuation of a patient's declaration made pursuant to the provisions of R.S.
Another requirement is that there be two witnesses to the patient's declaration. See R.S.
Your fourth question is complicated, and the circumstances in which it arises must be understood. Our understanding is that it relates to several questions about the timing of an oral declaration and the diagnosis, which, in order to comply with R.S.
"(3) An oral or nonverbal declaration may be made by an adult in the presence of two witnesses by any nonwritten means of communication at any time subsequent to the diagnosis of a terminal and irreversible *Page 5 condition."
(Emphasis added.) The person may be ninety years old but suffers from nothing but elderly age. The time is not ripe for an oral declaration pursuant to R.S.
Also as to this fourth question, our understanding of the circumstances under which some of the problems arise include, for example, a nursing home or a hospital where elderly and/or other patients admitted there are routinely approached by physicians or other health care providers who seek to write up a POLST on them for the future and who, in connection therewith, ask, in a perfunctory and/or peremptory manner, that the person make an "end-of-life" declaration under R.S.
We should make one last note. Despite the literal reading that these statutes can sometimes be susceptible to, the situation intended by these statutes is where the life-threatening, terminal, and irreversible condition or disease has brought the patient to imminent death. Otherwise, common sense and good medical practice should prevail. For example, if a patient has prostate cancer, which, after radiation treatment, has recurred and which, after hormone therapy, has become hormone refractory, it can properly be said that he has a life-threatening, terminal, and irreversible condition and disease, because no treatment, beyond that which he has already had, is known to cure the disease, which is eventually terminal. Yet, his Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) may still be only 0.2, and he can be expected to live a unimpaired life for years to come. If that patient also develops a digestive disorder, the cause of which is unbeknownst to him, and becomes weak, debilitated, and dehydrated from lengthy reflux vomiting and is hospitalized, he should not have withheld either artificial nutrition (if, though rarely, it would be needed in this situation) or artificial hydration (which would usually be required in this situation). Withholding either, if needed, would be highly inappropriate. Rather, the proper medical practice would be to stop the vomiting by medication (such as Reglan), intravenously hydrate him, and treat the reflux disease (with, for example, Acifex or Protonix), so that he could return to health and enjoy his years yet to live. *Page 6
Indeed, R.S.
"E. It is the policy of the state of Louisiana that human life is of the highest and inestimable value through natural death. When interpreting this Part, any ambiguity shall be interpreted to preserve human life."
We trust that this opinion has adequately answered your opinion request, but if you need to ask additional questions, please do not hesitate to ask them of us. With warmest regards, we remain
Yours very truly,
CHARLES C. FOTI, JR.
ATTORNEY GENERAL
By:__________________________
THOMAS S. HALLIGAN
Assistant Attorney General
