Summary
Suboptimal care at the end-of-life can be due to lack of access or knowledge of patient
wishes. Ambiguity is often the result of non-standardized formats. Borrowing digital
technology from other industries and using existing health information infrastructure
can greatly improve the completion, storage, and distribution of advance directives.
We believe several simple, low-cost adaptations to regional and federal programs can
raise the standard of end-of-life care.
Citation: Wood NM, D’Amore JD, Jones SL, Sittig DF, Ness RB. Death, taxes and advance directives.
Appl Clin Inf 2014; 5: 589–593 http://dx.doi.org/10.4338/ACI-2013-12-IE-0099
Keywords
Health information exchange - end of life - advance directive