Every U.S. state has developed legal rules to address end-of-life decision making. No law to date has effectively dealt with medical futility-an issue that has engendered significant debate in the medical and legal literature, many court cases, and a formal opinion from the American Medical Association's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs. In 1999, Texas was the first state to adopt a law regulating end-of-life decisions, providing a legislatively sanctioned, extrajudicial, due process mechanism for resolving medical futility disputes and other end-of-life ethical disagreements. After 2 years of practical experience with this law, data collected at a large tertiary care teaching hospital strongly suggest that the law represents a first step toward practical resolution of this controversial area of modern health care. As such, the law may be of interest to practitioners, patients, and legislators elsewhere.
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Fine, R. L., & Mayo, T. W. (2003, May 6). Resolution of Futility by Due Process: Early Experience with the Texas Advance Directives Act. Annals of Internal Medicine. American College of Physicians. https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-138-9-200305060-00011