Introduction
Detering, Arnold, & Dizon (2014) describe advance directives as the documents, which an individual completes while still having the decisional capacity regarding the way treatment decisions ought to be made on his/her behalf in the event he/she losses this decisional capacity. Thus, advance directives allow an individual clarify his/her decisions regarding end-of-life care in advance. According to Thomas & Lobo (2011), advanced directives failed in achieving their goals, which are giving the ill people and their family more control over their care and ensuring that their wishes regarding the rejection of treatment were recognized, even though they were not capable of ...