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Living Wills
A living will is your written expression of how
you want to be treated in certain medical conditions. Depending
on state law, this document may permit you to express whether
or not you wish to be given life-sustaining treatments in the
event you are terminally ill or injured, to decide in advance
whether you wish to be provided food and water via intravenous
devices ("tube feeding"), and to give other medical directions
that impact the end of life. "Life-sustaining treatment" means
the use of available medical machinery and techniques, such as
heart-lung machines, ventilators, and other medical equipment
and techniques that will sustain and possibly extend your life,
but which will not by themselves cure your condition. In addition
to terminal illness or injury situations, most states permit you
to express your preferences as to treatment using life-sustaining
equipment and/or tube feeding for medical conditions that leave
you permanently unconscious and without detectable brain activity.
A living will applies in situations where the
decision to use such treatments may prolong your life for a limited
period of time and not obtaining such treatment would result in
your death. It does not mean that medical professionals would
deny you pain medications and other treatments that would relieve
pain or otherwise make you more comfortable. Living wills do not
determine your medical treatment in situations that do not affect
your continued life, such as routine medical treatment and non
life-threatening medical conditions. In all states the determination
as to whether or not you are in such a medical condition is determined
by medical professionals, usually your attending physician and
at least one other medical doctor who has examined you and/or
reviewed your medical situation. Most states permit you to include
other medical directions that you wish your physicians to be aware
of regarding the types of treatment you do or do not wish to receive.
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