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Question
What is a Portable Order for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST) form?
Answer

POLST is a set of 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. The POLST form is usually for persons with serious illness or frailty. The “rule of thumb” is to recommend POLST for patients if their provider would not be surprised if they die within a year.

The POLST concept was originally created to guide emergency medical services (EMS) personnel in emergency situations. EMS staff was not able to honor advance directives or family member instructions for no cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), because EMS must follow medical orders. POLST was developed to allow EMS to honor patients' no-CPR decisions by turning them into medical orders.

POLST is intended to prevent unwanted or futile treatment, reduce patient and family suffering, and help ensure that individual's wishes regarding end-of-life care are honored. A POLST is valid in all care settings and is portable from one care setting to another. It does not replace advance directives or a durable power of attorney. It is valid with or without advance directives or durable power of attorney. In Washington, it is a bright green form (photocopies and faxes of signed POLST forms are also legal and valid) and should be located in a prominent, easily noticeable location in the home or bedside and in the medical record.

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Portable Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment
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