Getting Your Medical Wishes in Order Before a Crisis Hits
Hospitals ask a question that stumps many: Would you want doctors to revive you if your heart stops?
For some, the answer comes instantly. For others, panic sets in. But here’s the truth—this isn’t about predicting disaster. It’s about ensuring your values shape your care when you can’t speak for yourself.
Two Tools to Guide Your Care
1. Advance Directives: Your Personal Health Blueprint
Think of an advance directive as a living instruction manual. It lets you:
- Name a trusted person to make medical decisions if you can’t.
- Specify preferences—like whether you’d want machines to sustain your breathing or feeding tubes if you can’t eat.
- Avoid rigid "yes or no" choices—just outline what matters most to you.
This isn’t about giving up. It’s about control.
2. Code Status: The Emergency Playbook
A code status only kicks in during one scenario: when your heart or breathing stops. Here’s what it covers:
- Full code: Doctors will attempt everything—chest compressions, shocks, intubation—to restart your heart.
- Partial choices: You can opt out of parts, like skipping the breathing tube.
- The catch: Some combinations are harder to execute in real emergencies. That’s why clarity early on is critical.
The Best Time to Decide? Now.
Healthcare rules shift fast. Your code status isn’t permanent—you can update it anytime. But the clearest thinking happens when you’re healthy and in control.
Waiting for a crisis forces others to guess. And in those moments, guessing is the last thing you’d want for yourself.