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What Doctors Wish Every Patient Had: A Clinician’s Perspective on Advance Directives

I’ve spent more than two decades working in critical care and hospitalist medicine. In that time, I’ve probably participated in a thousand end-of-life conversations with families of incapacitated patients. The single most important variable determining how those conversations go — and how the patient’s care ultimately unfolds — is whether the patient had a clear advance directive in place before their crisis.

This isn’t an overstatement. The presence or absence of this document changes everything.

What I See in Patients Without Advance Directives

When a patient arrives incapacitated — say, from a severe stroke, a cardiac arrest, or a serious accident — and has no advance directive on file, the clinical team immediately enters what we call “maximal intervention” mode. This isn’t a choice; it’s a legal and ethical default. Without clear documentation otherwise, we do everything possible to preserve life.

This can mean intubation, ventilator support, feeding tubes, CPR with rib fractures in an elderly patient, multiple rounds of advanced cardiac life support, aggressive antibiotics, vasopressors, dialysis. Every intervention is medically reasonable in context. Every intervention can also be a form of suffering for a patient whose prognosis is poor or who had already decided they wouldn’t want it.

Once the patient is on these supports, the clinical team works with the family to figure out what the patient actually would have wanted. And here’s where it gets painful: the family often doesn’t know. They argue among themselves. They ask us for guidance, and we can only describe medical possibilities — we can’t tell them what their mother or father would have chosen.

I’ve watched families argue for days in conference rooms next to the ICU, while their loved one lies in a bed receiving increasingly invasive care that nobody’s sure they actually wanted.

What I See in Patients With Advance Directives

When a patient has a clear, current advance directive, the clinical team follows it. If the patient has specified they don’t want mechanical ventilation in a terminal condition, we don’t intubate. If they’ve named a patient advocate, we talk to that person and follow their direction consistent with the documented wishes.

The family doesn’t have to decide. The patient already did. The family’s role shifts from making impossible decisions to supporting the patient through the execution of their pre-expressed wishes.

In emotional terms, the difference is profound. Families with advance directives often describe the experience as hard but clear. Families without them describe it as traumatic.

The Myths I Have to Debunk

Over the years, I’ve heard the same misconceptions repeated dozens of times. Let me address a few of the most common:

“An advance directive means the doctors won’t fight for me.” False. Advance directives are only invoked in specific clinical situations — typically when a patient is terminal, permanently unconscious, or in a condition from which recovery isn’t reasonable. For routine illnesses where recovery is expected, we treat aggressively regardless of the directive.

“I don’t need one — my family knows what I’d want.” Usually they don’t. In my experience, maybe 40% of the time the family has accurately described the patient’s stated wishes. The other 60% of the time, family members guess, project their own preferences, or disagree with each other. And in the absence of documentation, we have no way to override the family’s claims, even if they’re wrong.

“I’m young; I don’t need one yet.” Terrible car accidents happen to 25-year-olds. Unexpected strokes happen to 40-year-olds. Everyone over 18 should have one, regardless of health status.

“I can just tell my doctor what I want.” Medical records are fragmented. The emergency department doctor treating you after an accident in another city isn’t the doctor who knows your preferences. A documented, portable advance directive is essential.

What I Wish Families Knew

When a family member is about to be admitted to a hospital, and you know their advance directive status is unclear, this is the moment to address it. Have the conversation. Get the document in place, or update the existing one. Bring it to the hospital with you.

Specifically for Michigan residents, make sure the document complies with Michigan’s patient advocate designation requirements. Out-of-state forms, online generic forms, or informal written wishes may not have the same legal weight in a Michigan hospital. Working with an attorney who specifically drafts a living will michigan document ensures it meets the state-specific requirements our hospitals are looking for.

The Conversation Families Should Have

The conversation about end-of-life wishes is hard, but it’s finite. It happens once (or at most a few times as circumstances change). Compare that to the unending weight of making decisions for someone else in the absence of a conversation you never had — that weight can last years.

Practical tips for having the conversation:

Start with something concrete, not abstract. “What do you think about the Terri Schiavo case?” or “Did you see the article about [any recent end-of-life news story]?” Concrete scenarios are easier to discuss than abstract principles. Let the person express their own values. Don’t lead them toward your preferences. Write down what they say. Memory fails under stress. Documentation doesn’t. Get it formalized. A hand-written note isn’t a legal advance directive.

The Clinical Plea

From the medical side of the bed: please, get this document. For yourself, for your family, for the clinical team that will be caring for you. We want to do what you would have wanted. We need your guidance to do that.

The alternative is a roomful of people — doctors, nurses, family members — making their best guesses about your wishes while you lie unconscious in a hospital bed. That’s not how anyone wants their end-of-life care to be decided. And it’s completely avoidable, for the cost of one appointment with an estate planning attorney.

Michael Caine

Michael Caine is a versatile writer and entrepreneur who owns a PR network and multiple websites. He can write on any topic with clarity and authority, simplifying complex ideas while engaging diverse audiences across industries, from health and lifestyle to business, media, and everyday insights.

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