Over 75? Sign here if you're ready for death: GPs to ask ALL older patients if they'll agree to a 'do not resuscitate' order

  • New NHS guidelines urge GPs to draw up end-of-life plans for over 75s
  • Also applies to younger patients with serious conditions, such as cancer 
  • Told to ask if patients wants doctors to resuscitate them if health worsens
  • Medical professionals say it is 'blatantly wrong' and will frighten elderly 

Doctors are being told to ask all patients over 75 if they will agree to a 'do not resuscitate' order.

New NHS guidelines urge GPs to draw up end-of-life plans for over-75s, as well as younger patients suffering from cancer, dementia, heart disease or serious lung conditions.

They are also being told to ask whether the patient wants doctors to try to resuscitate them if their health suddenly deteriorates.

New NHS guidelines urge GPs to draw up end-of-life plans for over-75s and say it will improve their care

New NHS guidelines urge GPs to draw up end-of-life plans for over-75s and say it will improve their care

The NHS says the guidance will improve patients' end-of-life care, but medical professionals say it is 'blatantly wrong' and will frighten the elderly into thinking they are being 'written off'.

In some surgeries, nurses are cold-calling patients over 75 or with long-term conditions and asking them over the phone if they have 'thought about resuscitation'. 

Other patients have spoken of the shock of going in for a routine check-up and being asked about resuscitation.

The extraordinary new guidance has been brought in despite the outcry over the use of 'do not resuscitate' orders under the Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP). 

The discredited pathway was scrapped last year after the Mail revealed that doctors were placing 'DNR' notices on patients without their knowledge and depriving them of food and fluids.

The guidelines – which also recommend patients should be asked if they want to die at home – have been drawn up by experts advising NHS England, the organisation which runs the health service.

Patients have spoken of the shock of going in for a routine check-up and being asked about resuscitation

Patients have spoken of the shock of going in for a routine check-up and being asked about resuscitation

One expert last night said the guidance was 'the thin end of the wedge of assisted suicide'.

Professor Patrick Pullicino, who spearheaded the campaign against the LCP, said: 'What is most blatantly wrong is trying to get someone to agree to a 'do not resuscitate' order before they are even sick. For somebody who is perfectly well, or has got a mild or not a serious illness, that would be totally out of place.'

Roy Lilley, a health policy analyst and former NHS trust chairman, said: 'It will give some older people the impression that no-one wants to bother with them. It looks as though they're being told: 'You're old, how do you want to die because you're in the way'.

'It's a very clunky thing to do – it's completely unnecessary.'

Roger Goss, of Patient Concern, said: 'There will be some people who will be put out, disconcerted and think they are not going to get the best available care. They might think this is a way of saving money for the NHS. Other patients will be prepared to talk about it and think it sensible.'

A 'do not resuscitate' order is meant to stop a patient suffering unnecessarily where their lives are likely to be extended for only a short period of time. 

Resuscitation can be traumatic and cause broken ribs or damage to organs, including the spleen. 

Doctors estimate that only 10 to 15 per cent of patients are brought back to life and some suffer permanent brain damage.

But asking patients to make such a decision when they may have many years to live will prompt concerns that the NHS is writing them off.

A 'do not resuscitate' order is meant to stop a patient suffering unnecessarily where their lives are likely to be extended for only a short period of time

A 'do not resuscitate' order is meant to stop a patient suffering unnecessarily where their lives are likely to be extended for only a short period of time

In some parts of England, practice nurses have been instructed to cold-call patients and fill out an advance care plan for them over the phone.

Ruth Nicholls, a palliative care nurse in the South East, told how her brother-in-law, who has a heart condition, was contacted immediately after he had a hospital appointment. 

In an interview with Nursing Times, she said: 'He came back from an outpatient appointment having not had very good news and later that afternoon got a phone call from one of the practice nurses at his GP surgery.

'She said: 'Hello, we're ringing all our patients with chronic conditions to see how you are and whether you have thought about resuscitation.'

'This conversation was absolutely out of nowhere. My brother-in-law was shocked and my sister was distraught.'

She also said an elderly patient was asked about resuscitation by a district nurse he had never met during a routine visit.

'One of the first questions he was asked was whether he wanted to be resuscitated,' she said. 'People are being left in great distress.'

The controversial Liverpool Care Pathway was phased out last year following harrowing reports that patients were being left so dehydrated they were left to suck on wet sponges given by relatives because nurses had banned water. 

HOSPITALS 'STILL USING THE CARE PATHWAY'

The Liverpool Care Pathway was meant to be phased out last year following concerns that it was being abused by NHS staff.

But recently, nurses have warned that it is still being used by hospitals under a different name.

The LCP is a practice whereby foods and fluids are withdrawn from patients who are thought to be close to death – and they are usually sedated. 

Patients are usually also given a 'do not resuscitate' order, instructing doctors not to attempt to restart their hearts should they suffer a cardiac arrest.

But it was meant to be banned last summer following a campaign by the Mail highlighting how the practice was being used by hospitals to free up bed space or claim controversial financial incentives. 

Relatives told of how they gave dehydrated patients water in secret, or wet sponges for them to suck on.

An inquiry in 2013 overseen by Baroness Julia Neuberger ordered the practice to be phased out by hospitals by the summer of 2014 – and said no patients should ever be denied food or fluid.

But earlier this year nurses and cancer charities told MPs on the health select committee that the pathway was still being used by hospitals – although not by that name. 

One nurse warned that the 'abuse' suffered by patients under the LCP may still be happening in the NHS, a prospect she described as 'horrifically worrying'.

The comments below have not been moderated.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

We are no longer accepting comments on this article.