Vol. 70, No. 12, December
1997
Wisconsin's Do Not Resuscitate
Bracelet Law Raises
Legal and Medical Issues
Liability issues
Fines and imprisonment of $500 and 30 days maximum are imposed upon any
person who conceals, defaces or damages a DNR bracelet without the patient's
consent, and upon any person who forces a person to sign a DNR bracelet
order by using threats, intimidation or coercion. A person who falsifies
or transfers a DNR bracelet to a patient who has not requested one, or who
conceals the revocation of a DNR bracelet, may be punished by a fine of
up to $10,000 and up to 10 years imprisonment. 5
Failure to honor a DNR bracelet
The statute specifies that no caregiver or facility will be held liable
for providing resuscitation unless they have actual knowledge of the DNR
order. Additionally, no liability attaches if a provider fails to act when
there is no actual knowledge of revocation of a DNR order. Ambiguity may
arise when a patient is wearing a bracelet that appears to be defaced or
damaged, and the patient cannot clarify his or her wishes. In this situation,
CPR should be provided because the only valid bracelet is one that is clearly
not "tampered with." Further, an emergency caregiver cannot judge
the competence of a patient so CPR should always be provided when requested,
even by a confused patient. The statute provides no penalty for resuscitating
a person wearing a valid bracelet.
Some legal scholars have proposed creating a tort of "wrongful living"
to allow damages to a patient whose right to refuse medical treatment has
been violated by unconsented treatment. In this scenario, a medical caregiver
who knowingly or negligently provided resuscitation would be liable. 6 Further, if the treatment itself was negligently
performed, damages would be available for medical malpractice (that is,
battery for nonconsensual touching).
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has reiterated the broad social purposes
of tort law:
"1) as a matter of justice, tort law shifts the losses caused by
a personal injury to the one at fault;
"2) by placing the cost with the one in the position to prevent
the injury, tort law seeks to deter unsafe behavior; and
"3) to compensate the victim, tort law creates a mechanism to distribute
losses widely." 7
According to its advocates, the wrongful living cause of action would
send a message to medical caregivers that they must respect patients' value
decisions and their right to refuse medical treatment.
Physicians have a duty to provide medical care to their patients, thus
asserting this cause of action may place physicians in a legal and ethical
dilemma. By withholding treatment, physicians may face medical malpractice;
by providing treatment, they may risk civil liability. In some situations,
a physician may decide that a DNR order or bracelet is appropriate because
resuscitation can be of no medical benefit to a patient. In this situation,
it is the physician's medical expertise that is determinative, not the patient's
values. In other situations, while sustaining the patient's life, resuscitation
may so seriously compromise quality of life that the decision must be based
on the patient's values. Decision-making is further complicated by studies
showing that patients who desire an early death often are suffering from
a treatable depression. 8
Proponents of a wrongful living cause of action also debate the issue
of damages. A patient with a short life expectancy could claim little if
any pecuniary losses. An elderly person receiving social security, retirement
benefits and Medicare would have no loss of income and few uncovered medical
expenses. Indeed the issue is not truly one of compensation for financial
losses but for a breach of the agreement not to provide resuscitation. Legal
scholars such as Tricia J. Hackleman argue that disrespect for patient decision-making
is common, thus a new cause of action is the only way to force physicians
to respect patient rights. Hackleman bases her argument upon a 1978 survey
of California physicians that showed 11 to 20 percent of physicians refused
to follow patient directives, even when they faced no risk of legal liability
for doing so. 9
In the ensuing 19 years, the public and physicians have been well educated
about patient rights. In 1990 Congress passed the Patient Self Determination
Act, requiring that all patients admitted to health-care facilities be asked
about advanced directives. The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health
Care Organizations requires its members to implement procedures to provide
advanced directives. Popular magazine and talk shows have provided wide
exposure to the issue of patient rights. Thus it is likely that an update
of the California study would find physicians more compliant with patients'
wishes regarding DNR status.
However, this new awareness of patient rights coupled with the rise of
managed care has created a risk associated with asserting a right to refuse
treatment. As Judge Posner recently expressed:
"HMOs, though they have made great strides in recent years because
of the widespread concern with skyrocketing medical costs, remain relative
upstarts in the market for physician services. Many people don't like them
because of the restriction on the patient's choice of doctors or because
they fear that HMOs skimp on service, since, as we said, the marginal revenue
of a medical procedure to an HMO is zero. From a short-term financial standpoint
- which we do not suggest is the only standpoint that an HMO is likely to
have - the HMO's incentive is to keep you healthy if it can but if you get
very sick, and are unlikely to recover to a healthy state involving few
medical expenses, to let you die as quickly and cheaply as possible. HMOs
compensate for these perceived drawbacks by charging a lower price than
fee-for-service plans." 10
Some proponents of living wills and other advanced directives such as
the bracelet laws, argue that their use might reduce medical costs near
the end of life. 11 The attractiveness of advanced
directives as a cost-saving device in managed care creates a serious conflict
of interest. Further, patients are offended by the federally required practice
of asking all adult patients (not just those with a terminal condition)
about their desire for advanced directives upon admission to a hospital.
Nonterminal patients who must make extensive use of medical services, such
as disabled persons or those with chronic illnesses, may be especially sensitive
to the issue raised by Judge Posner. These negative reactions coupled with
the rise of cost-conscious managed care also may effect how widely the bracelet
is used, even among qualified terminally ill patients.
Wisconsin case law on liability issues
Wisconsin courts have not recognized the wrongful living cause of action.
Other related causes of action have been recognized, however, and may provide
some insight into how a Wisconsin court might decide a wrongful living case.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court in Slawek v. Stroh refused to recognize
a new cause of action for wrongful birth because such recognition "would
have vast social ramifications and the creation of such a cause of action
is the type of public policy decision that should be made by the people
of this state or their elected legislative representatives." 12 In Slawek a healthy child brought suit against
her father for the suffering associated with her illegitimate birth.
The refusal to legally recognize wrongful birth claims has been reiterated
in Terry v. Johnson 13 and Dumer
v. St. Michael's Hospital. 14 In Dumer
a child born with congenital defects sued her mother's physician for wrongful
birth resulting from a missed diagnosis of the mother's rubella. The court
found the major obstacle to the child's claim was the determination of damages.
15 The damages claimed flowed from the result
of being born, as opposed to having been aborted, should the mother have
known about her exposure to rubella. The court refused to measure the difference
between "life with defects against the utter void of nonexistence"
16 and denied compensatory damages.
In Terry, as part of a bankruptcy proceeding, a physician sought
to restrain prosecution of a wrongful life malpractice claim for a child
conceived due to a defectively performed vasectomy. The Bankruptcy Court
declined to address a legal claim not yet recognized in Wisconsin and vacated
the order, noting that Wisconsin state courts should decide important public
policy questions.
In Marciniak v. Lundborg, an action by parents to recover costs
of raising a healthy child conceived due to a negligently performed sterilization
operation on the mother, the Wisconsin Supreme Court held that costs of
raising the child to majority were recoverable. 17
The court cited the general Wisconsin rule of tort that a person has "an
obligation to exercise reasonable care so as not to cause foreseeable harm
to another." 18 The court rejected the
argument that the child-rearing costs were out of proportion to the doctor's
culpability, noting that the couple likely had made their decision in part
based upon their inability to afford the cost of raising another child.
The court reiterated that the patient had sought medical assistance for
the "express purpose of permanently avoiding conception, and as a result,
the physician can be held liable for the consequences that are the direct
result of his negligence." 19 The court
shifted the costs of raising the child to the negligent physician.
Extrapolating from these cases, Wisconsin courts may find that medical
malpractice based upon battery is a sufficient cause of action when a DNR
order is intentionally or negligently disregarded. Damages from physical
harm caused by the act of resuscitation may be recoverable just as the costs
of raising a child recoverable in Marciniak. In Slawek and
Dumer the Wisconsin Supreme Court refused to recognize a cause of
action for wrongful life due to the impossibility of valuing nonexistence
over life. The court found that the social policy ramifications of such
a decision should be considered by the people. For similar public policy
reasons, the court would likely defer creating the wrongful living tort
to the Legislature.
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Jane Barclay Mandel, U.W. 1997 cum laude, practices with Quarles
& Brady, Milwaukee, in estate planning and tax exempt organizations.
She formerly was a senior research scientist in the psychobiology division
of the Long Island Research Institute, an assistant professor of family
medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin, and a consulting psychologist
to the Milwaukee Task Force on Battered Women. She received her Ph.D. in
psychology in 1977 from Northwestern University. |
Conclusion
The new bracelet bill attempts to provide more patient autonomy and better
assurance that a terminal patient's wish not to be resuscitated will be
respected even when the patient is not in a health-care institution. As
more terminally ill people are either ambulatory or being cared for at home,
this law may provide a useful extension of patients' right to refuse treatment,
and to have their decisions honored.
Questions of interpretation and extent of actual use remain. Research
on the bracelet's frequency of use, how patients learn about its availability
and how physicians interpret who qualifies for a bracelet would provide
valuable data about the new law's effects. The conflict between the physician's
need to respect patient choices and the physician's role as expert healer
merit continued attention, as does the conflict of interest faced by managed-care
organizations whose interest in containing costs may taint their support
of patient advanced directives, including the DNR bracelet.
Endnotes
1 1995 Wisconsin Act 200.
2 Wis.Stat. 154, 155.
3 Wis. Stat. 154.17(4).
4 R.N. Butler, R. Burt, K.M. Foley, R.S. Morrison,
Palliative Medicine: Providing Care When Cure is Not Possible, Geriatrics
33 (May 1, 1996).
5 Wis. Stat. 154.23.
6 Tricia J. Hackleman, Violation of an
Individual's Right to Die: The Need for a Wrongful Living Cause of Action,
64 U. Cin. L. Rev. 1355, 1370-71 (1966).
7 CLL Assoc. v. Arrowhead Pacific,
174 Wis. 2d 604, 610, 497 N.W.2d 115, 117 (1993).
8 Thomas B. Marzen, "Out, Out Brief
Candle": Constitutionally Prescribed Suicide for the Terminally Ill,
21 Hastings Const. L.Q. 799, 811-12.
9 Diane L. Redleaf, Suzanne B. Schmitt, William
C. Thompson, The California Natural Death Act: An Empirical Study of
Physicians' Practices, 31 Stan. L. Rev. 913 (1979).
10 Blue Cross & Blue Shield United
of Wis. v. Marshfield Clinic, 65 F.3d 1406, 1410 (7th Cir. 1995).
11 Laura Hanson and Eric Rodgman, The
Use of Living Wills at the End of Life: A National Study, Arch. Internal
Med., May 13, 1996.
12 62 Wis. 2d 295, 317-18, 215 N.W.2d 9,
22 (1974).
13 12 B.R. 578 (E.D. Wis. 1981).
14 69 Wis. 2d 766, 233 N.W.2d 372 (1975).
15 Id. at 772, 233 N.W.2d at 375.
16 Id. at 773, 233 N.W.2d at 376.
17 Marciniak v. Lundborg, 153 Wis.
2d 59, 450 N.W.2d 243 (1990).
18 Id. at 70, 450 N.W.2d at 248.
19 Id.
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