A rapid review of states' Portable Medical Order forms and the National POLST Paradigm for Advance Care Planning

09/20/25 at 03:35 AM

A rapid review of states' Portable Medical Order forms and the National POLST Paradigm for Advance Care Planning
Journal of Hospice and Palliative Nursing; by Tracy Fasolino, Megan Pate, Nancy Dias, Rikki Hooper, Lena Burgess, Megan Golden, Savannah Horvick, Jamie Rouse, Elizabeth Snyder; 8/25
Hospice and palliative care nurses initiate goals of care conversations with patients and family members while advocating for the completion of advance directives. As leaders in these conversations, nurses must have a working knowledge of the various forms, such as portable medical orders. The National Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) Paradigm calls for the standardization of portable medical orders to ensure goal-concordant care that can cross all healthcare settings. This rapid review provides an overview of state-level portable medical order forms, compares and contrasts them with the National POLST form, and proposes policy recommendations for hospice and palliative care nurses to advocate within their state, territory, or tribal nation. 

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