United States Department of Veterans Affairs
United States Department of Veterans Affairs

VA Healthcare Network Upstate New York - VISN 2

Albany VA Medical Center

Significant Care Issues

Advance Directives
The Stratton VA Medical Center staff is available to assist you in completing advance directives. These are also referred to as living wills. You may choose to appoint a health care proxy to speak for you and make decisions about your health care if you are unable to speak or make decisions for yourself. Your doctor, nurse, social worker or chaplain can discuss this with you. If you have a living will or durable power of attorney, please tell our staff and provide us with a copy for your file. If you have completed an advance directive and you wish to change your mind, please tell our staff right away. You do not have to complete an advance directive to receive treatment.

Do Not Resuscitate (DNR)
Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) means cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and/or other heroic health or life saving measures will not be started when cardiac or respiratory arrest occurs. After discussion with your doctor, if you are able, you will make the DNR decision. If you are too ill to make that decision, your family or power of attorney makes that decision with your doctor. The DNR order is not permanent and can be stopped if you change your mind and inform your doctor. The staff's concern for your medical needs and comfort will stay the same. You will be given whatever is needed to relieve pain and make you comfortable. Ethics Advisory Committee
Patients and/or their caregivers often struggle making choices about what is best for their health care. An example would be whether or not to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatments on a patient that is end-of-life (such as ventilator support, feeding tube, antibiotics, etc.).

The Ethics Advisory Committee is comprised of diverse VA staff to respond to consults as requested, interpret ethics policies, clarify ethics-related procedures (advance directives/treatment preferences, informed consent, etc.), and discuss ethics questions and dilemmas. If you have questions about the ethics of any treatment or other health care issues, you should explore these with your health care team. You have the right to request a review by the Ethics Advisory Committee (a group of VA staff who meets to discuss these problems and make suggestions when the need arises). If you or your family has questions about the ethics of any treatment or other issues, you should talk with your health care team. If you still have concerns, you may ask for a review of the issues by the Ethics Advisory Committee.

Organ, Eye And Tissue Donation/ Anatomical Gift Program
The Stratton VA Medical Center participates with the Center for Donation and Transplant for organ, eye and tissue donation and the Albany Medical College Anatomical Gift Program. Talk to your family members about organ, eye and tissue donation so they know your wishes. Even if you signed a donor card, your family will be asked to give consent before donation can occur. Contact a member of your health care team to inform them of your wish to donate.