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  2. Portable Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST) | ...

    doh.wa.gov/.../portable-orders-life-sustaining-treatment-polst

    The department and the Washington State Medical Association (WSMA) have implemented a Portable Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment form, which will allow a person to summarize their wishes regarding end of life treatment.

  3. In Washington state, the Department of Health instructs their paramedics to be guided by the POLST form and only the POLST form. While a “pocket” POLST, or bracelets and necklaces could alert a first responder as to a person's wishes and may encourage them to find the POLST form, medics in Washington are not allowed to act on directions ...

  4. Washington - POLST Form

    eforms.com/images/2018/03/Washington-POLST-Form.pdf

    Completing POLST • Completing a POLST form is always voluntary. • Treatment choices documented on this form should be the result of shared decision-making by an individual or their surrogate and medical provider based on the person’s preferences and medical condition. • POLST must be signed by a physician/ARNP/PA-C and patient, or their

  5. Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST)

    depts.washington.edu/.../physician-orders-for-life-sustaining-treatment-polst

    Your physician can use the Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) to represent your wishes as clear and specific medical orders, indicating what types of life-sustaining treatment you want or do not want at the end of life. What is the POLST form?

  6. POLST - End of Life Washington

    endoflifewa.org/tools-for-planning/polst

    A Portable Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) form (formerly called the EMS – No CPR form) is intended for any adult, 18 years of age or older, with serious health conditions. The POLST form accomplishes two major purposes: It is portable from one care setting to another.

  7. POLST Toolkit - Honoring Choices PNW

    www.honoringchoicespnw.org/polst-toolkit

    The Washington state Portable Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST) is a set of portable, actionable medical orders designed to communicate an individual’s wishes regarding care in the event of an emergency, when they cannot speak for themselves.

  8. Form | Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) -...

    www.providence.org/-/media/Project/psjh/providence/wa/files/shch/polstform.pdf?...

    Completing Polst • The POLST is usually for persons with serious illness or frailty. • Completing a POLST form is always voluntary. • The POLST must be completed by a health care provider based on the patient’s preferences and medical condition. • POLST must be signed by a physician/ARNP/PA-C and patient, or their surrogate, to be valid.

  9. Washington POLST Clinician Toolkit POLST Completion Guide for...

    www.honoringchoicespnw.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/POLST-Completion-Guide-v...

    This POLST Completion Guide is a resource designed to help health care providers (MD, DO, ARNP, PA-C) engage with individuals, or their legal medical decision makers, to meaningfully and effectively complete a POLST. We suggest you review this guide with a printed POLST form. This document is one resource of the . Washington POLST Clinician Toolkit

  10. What is a Portable Order for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST) ...

    nursing.wa.gov/faq/what-portable-order-life-sustaining-treatment-polst-form-0

    POLST is a set of portable medical orders, executed by an adult patient (or legal surrogate) and the patient's medical provider, to guide medical treatment based on the patient's current medical condition and goals. POLST is usually for persons with serious illness or frailty.

  11. Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) Form

    www.thewetzelfoundation.org/.../uploads/2015/02/Washington-POLST_Information-Brochure.pdf

    In what setting is the POLST form used? The completed POLST form is a physi-cian order form that will remain with you if you are transported between care settings, regardless of whether you are in the hospital, at home or in a long-term care facility. Where is the POLST form kept? If you live at home you should keep the original