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Directive

About: Directive is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5695 publications have been published within this topic receiving 56084 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effort currently undertaken (up to the end of December 1998) to define the procedures to be used and characterise the substances covered is described.

19 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Research shows that while use of advance directives may be associated with a more graceful death, these documents do not speak loudly on their own and have equivocal effects upon health care costs.
Abstract: As we define the ethical framework in which directives operate, we must heed empirical research. Studies indicate that patients, wishes about life-sustaining treatments are not entirely stable over time, though choices to forgo life-sustaining treatment seem to be much more stable than choices to receive such treatment.[1] One report provides an excellent description of the vacillation and ambivalence of patients, choices when life-threatening events occur;[2] another indicates that patients vary in how strictly they wish to have their advance directives followed.[3] Very little research on the impact of advance directives upon decisions at the time of life-threatening events has been conducted. In a prospective study of advance directives that I and my collaborators conducted, several findings warranted attention.[4] First, even though the directives were created in an institutional long-term care setting and were available in the medical record, they were often left behind when patients were transferred to the acute care hospital. Second, even though the directive specified treatment choices for a variety of circumstances, including critical illness, terminal illness, and permanent unconsciousness, they were not applicable in all circumstances. The most striking finding, however, is that the advance directives were not always followed. Analysis of individual cases revealed two situations in which directives were not followed: when the preference in the directive was too restrictive to allow care that the family or provider believed to be approriate at the moment of illness, or when the family or provider did not believe the preferred care would be beneficial. Care was most likely to be consistent with previously expressed wishes if the patient remained competent, the directions were those previously expressed by the family, or the outcome event led to transfer to an acute care hospital setting where explicit discussion of treatment decisions was perhaps more likely. Anecdotal reports confirm that the existence of an advance directive may not lead to care consistent with a patient's wishes unless a surrogate vigorously asserts the validity of the directive.[5] On a positive note, one study reports that dialysis patients who had either written or verbal advance directives were much more likely than patients without directives to be reconciled to their death and to experience a death characterized by good interactions among patient, family, and medical staff., Mixed results have been reported from studies examining whether advance directives affect the cost of care at the end of life.[7] In sum, research shows that while use of advance directives may be associated with a more graceful death, these documents do not speak loudly on their own and have equivocal effects upon health care costs. While these empirical data are informative, changes in the medical approach to the end of life and die reimbursement of medical practice may have even more influence on the way we incorporate advance directives into practice. When Luis Kutner and later Sissela Bok conceived of living wills, modern medicine was tightly focused upon utilizing newly developed, life-sustaining treatments to prolong life. At the same time, the practice of medicine was reimbursed almost exclusively on a fee-for-service basis that created incentives for the physician to do more rather than less. Thus living wills were designed so that individuals who wished to forgo treatment at the end of life could fend off these tendencies. Since that time there has been a cascade of pressures upon and changes in the delivery of medical care that exert a much larger and different influence upon end-of-life decisions. New research information, demographics, economics, and ethics all have dampened the urge to use life-sustaining treatments indiscriminately at the end of life. Outcomes research has made us much more cognizant of the limited capacity of therapy to prolong life. …

19 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Despite a high prevalence of advance directives, the directives themselves had a very limited role in affecting treatments and the attention and format given to advance directives in the nursing home may need to be reevaluated.
Abstract: This study clarifies the role of advance directives in the process of decision making in nursing homes. Physicians reported on the actual use of advance directives in a medical decision-making process related to status changes in 70 nursing home residents (mean age = 89 years). Charts were also reviewed to assess the specifics of the advance directives. Despite a high prevalence of advance directives, the directives themselves had a very limited role in affecting treatments. The physicians surveyed viewed directives related to hospitalization as the most useful, though these were not the most available directives. The attention and format given to advance directives in the nursing home may need to be reevaluated.

19 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address the theoretical and practical challenge faced by the European policy community and Member States trying to simultaneously pursue renewable energy and environmental goals, as incorporated in the EU Renewable Energy Directive and the Water Framework Directive.
Abstract: This article addresses the theoretical and practical challenge faced by the European policy community and Member States trying to simultaneously pursue renewable energy and environmental goals, as incorporated in the EU Renewable Energy Directive and the Water Framework Directive. Through the case of hydropower, which is today at a crossroads between being a renewable electricity source − answering to climate change and energy security concerns − and a local environmental challenge in the light of degradation of river ecosystems and local biodiversity, the article explores the way renewable energy and water protection objectives are integrated inside the Common Implementation Strategy at the EU level. Based on document analysis and interviews, the mapping of the different frameworks shows that old conflicts and controversies related to the hydropower technology have been reopened and reframed to accommodate both the issue of energy security and the discourse on EU sustainability and climate change. Conclusions reveal that despite the creation of a multi-stakeholder platform for negotiation and collaboration, the Common Implementation Strategy fails on several occasions to explain how to achieve the right balance and leaves unclear what specifically has to be integrated and to what degree. Hence, given the plurality and diversity of values, interests and concerns in relation to hydropower and goals of the Water Framework Directive, a prioritization between water, climate and energy policy goals might be needed, with the possibility of having real winners and losers of the integration process. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment

19 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The article illustrates this conclusion by analysing the limitation periods for filing a claim included in the European Union Product Liability Directive, which are inherently incompatible with the concept of autonomous vehicles.

19 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023836
20221,824
2021129
2020188
2019245
2018280