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PAD Stories

"This time, with a PAD, I did not receive any treatments that I did not want. They were very respectful.  I really felt like the hospital took better care of me because I had my PAD. In fact, I think it's the best care that I've ever received.” Click for more...

 
Home arrow Blog arrow Making Sure PADs are Read
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Making Sure PADs are Read
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Consumers are concerned that hospitals won't have a copy of their PAD.  For example, we’ve heard consumers ask:  "How will the hospital know what is in my PAD?  If I'm sick, I won't know to take it with me."  What can be done about this?  Is the situation beyond repair and the logistics too difficult to make sure a PAD is seen when it needs to be seen?  Or are there some creative solutions out there? 

Readers have left 8 comments.
 1. Untitled
Guest User, Unregistered
IT won't work until they get electronic medical records centralized.
 Posted 2007-07-24 15:20:56
 2. PADs for Crisis
Erin T., Unregistered
If someone could make sure my hospital had my advance directive on the main computer screen maybe it could get flagged if I went to the emergency room when I was having a crisis. I live in New Jersey and have talked with my case manager about this and he thinks its a good idea. Maybe this is something you could try.
 Posted 2007-07-24 15:36:25
 3. Getting PADs to work
Guest, Unregistered
This is a BIG problem that won't be solved in this day and age of HIPAA. I think PADs are a good idea in the ideal world but not in mental health systems where no one has time or energy to find them in a pinch. I don't think this will work, sorry.
 Posted 2007-07-25 11:45:36
 4. Untitled
Guest, Unregistered
my experience is that doctors won't even ask about advanced directives when going into the hospital. SO even if the advanced directives are in the records, they won't even ask or look.
 Posted 2007-07-30 11:55:41
 5. Untitled
Guest, Unregistered
I think it is required by JCAHO for them to ask. I don't know if they always do ask, but they are supposed to. If JCAHO starts enforcing it, the hospitals will start asking the same way the do now with regular advance directives. I suppose one useful way to get PAD more used would be to lobby JCAHO about it rather than individual hospitals.
 Posted 2007-07-31 08:28:41
 6. RN case manager
Guest, Unregistered
JCAHO absolutely requires that patients be asked if they have an advance directive and that if they do, and don't have a copy with them, that their family be requested to bring a copy in or if unable to do so, the patient is asked to submit an absence form that states their wishes if they are competent to do so. The hospital is required to document three attempts to obtain their AD. The problem for a psychiatric AD is that there is no JCAHO requirement to request that. In our psych unit it is asked, but it is not required to be by JCAHO. The best thing to do would be to supply your doctor with a copy and if he would not be your admitting doctor, make sure that your medical doctor has a copy too. And if you already have a chart from a prior admission, you can take a copy to the medical records department and ask that it be added to your medical record. And keep several copies, one for each doctor, one with a reliable friend or family member and one in the car.
 Posted 2007-08-07 21:00:45
Please keep your comments brief and on topic, and remember that this is not a discussion thread.
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Bazelon Center
The National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives is a collaboration between The Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center and the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, funded by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
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(C) 2008 National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives