WVU Center for End-of-Life hoping for new funding

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — A program dedicated to help those who are in the final stage of their lives is looking to regain government funding.

The West Virginia University Center for End-of-Life Care has been serving Mountain State residents for almost 20 years with an online registry, which gives a directive of sorts to how one person may choose to spend their final days.

“We’re impacting over 100,000 West Virginians a year,” said Dr. Alvin Moss, the center’s founder, on WAJR Clarksburg’s “The Gary Bowden Show.”

Moss said the numbers can be a little surprising sometimes.

“We have 800 websites hits a month,” he said. “We have over 1,000 forms sent to our registry every month. We have over 90,000 forms on the registry so we are a key part of patient care here in West Virginia.”

One of the End-of-Life Center’s most commonly used services for West Virginians approaching or currently in their final stages of life is the Advanced Directive Database. The database contains thousands of living wills or advanced directives, which, according to Moss, could make a difference on whether an individual or a loved is able to choose the terms of what’s done during their final days.

“We believe, because patients tell us, that they want to live as long and as well as possible and dying gently,” Moss said. “And most people agree that dying gently is not dying in the intensive care unit on a breathing machine but dying at home or in a site of their preference with their loved ones and friends around them.”

Hospitals across West Virginia have been a part of the database, which has led to concerns regarding possible security hacks and the need for a consistent database for the amount of living wills on file.

According to Moss, most West Virginians reaching the end-of-life age have some sort of advanced directive or living will, but the issue of it either being in safety deposit box or some sort of unreachable area. The database, for hospitals, is that neutral and secure source in the event there are no other forms or documents.

“The registry has sort of been identified as a single source of truth,” he said, “If you complete it and give copies to the important people but then also put it in the registry, healthcare providers know ‘well if nobody seems to have the form let’s check and see if the registry has a copy.'”

Since the early 2000’s, the End-of-Life Center has received state funding from the West Virginia Legislature. This changed in 2016 when WVU decided to help fund the center in the midst of statewide economic pressures. In light of recent changes to West Virginia’s economic environment, there is hope that the state will resume funding that was there in years past.

Moss feels that the goals of the End-of-Life Center and the state’s goals should be enough to resume the relationship.

“Our goal is to help people have their values honored and respected at the end of life,” he said. “That’s the reason why for many many years we’ve had enthusiastic support from the West Virginia Legislature because they agree with those goals.”