In a hospital, few phrases carry as much weight as “full code.” It is a short term with major meaning: if a patient’s heart stops, breathing stops, or a life-threatening emergency occurs, the medical team is instructed to use all standard resuscitation measures to try to save that person’s life. Understanding full code status can help patients and families make clearer, calmer decisions before a crisis happens.
TLDR: Full code status means a patient wants healthcare providers to attempt resuscitation if their heart or breathing stops. This may include CPR, defibrillation, breathing tubes, medications, and intensive care. It does not guarantee survival or full recovery, and the risks and benefits can differ greatly depending on a person’s age, illness, and overall health. Discussing code status early helps ensure medical care matches a patient’s values and wishes.
What “Full Code” Means
Full code is a medical order that tells doctors, nurses, and emergency responders to perform full resuscitative efforts during cardiac or respiratory arrest. In simple terms, if the patient’s heartbeat or breathing stops, the healthcare team will act quickly and aggressively to restart them.
These efforts may include:
- CPR, or chest compressions, to manually pump blood through the body
- Defibrillation, using electrical shocks to treat certain dangerous heart rhythms
- Intubation, placing a breathing tube into the windpipe
- Mechanical ventilation, using a machine to help or fully control breathing
- Emergency medications, such as drugs to support the heart or blood pressure
- Transfer to intensive care, if ongoing life support is needed
Full code status is often the default choice when no other instructions are documented. However, “default” does not always mean “best.” The right choice depends on the patient’s medical condition, personal values, goals for care, and understanding of likely outcomes.
Full Code Is Not the Same as “Do Everything Forever”
A common misunderstanding is that full code means doctors must continue every possible treatment indefinitely. In reality, full code specifically refers to what should happen during a life-threatening arrest. It does not automatically mean a patient must remain on life support permanently or receive treatments that are medically ineffective.
For example, a patient may choose full code status but still refuse certain treatments, such as long-term feeding tubes, dialysis, or prolonged mechanical ventilation. Likewise, a person may want CPR attempted but may not want to live in a condition where they are permanently unconscious or unable to interact with loved ones.
This is why conversations about code status should go beyond a simple yes-or-no question. A more useful discussion includes: What outcomes would be acceptable? What level of disability would the patient find tolerable? What matters most: living as long as possible, comfort, independence, awareness, time with family, or something else?
What Happens During a Code?
When a patient “codes,” the atmosphere can become intense very quickly. An alarm may sound, staff may rush into the room, and a coordinated emergency response begins. One clinician starts chest compressions, another manages the airway, others prepare medications, monitor heart rhythms, document events, and communicate with the team leader.
Chest compressions must be forceful enough to move blood through the body. As a result, CPR can cause broken ribs, bruising, internal injuries, or significant pain if the patient survives. Defibrillation can leave burns or soreness. Intubation and ventilation can require sedation and may lead to complications such as pneumonia or difficulty weaning off the breathing machine.
These facts can sound frightening, but they are important. Resuscitation can be lifesaving, especially when the arrest is sudden, witnessed, and reversible, such as an abnormal heart rhythm in an otherwise functional person. However, for patients with advanced cancer, severe dementia, end-stage heart or lung disease, or multiple organ failure, the chance of meaningful recovery may be much lower.
Full Code vs. DNR and DNI
To understand full code, it helps to compare it with other common medical orders.
- DNR means Do Not Resuscitate. If the heart stops, CPR and attempts to restart the heart are not performed.
- DNI means Do Not Intubate. A breathing tube and mechanical ventilation are not used, though other treatments may continue.
- Comfort-focused care prioritizes relief of pain, anxiety, breathlessness, and distress rather than attempts to prolong life at all costs.
A DNR order does not mean “do not treat.” This is another common myth. A patient with DNR status can still receive antibiotics, fluids, oxygen, surgery, blood transfusions, medications, and hospital care. The order only limits resuscitation if the heart or breathing stops.
Who Decides Code Status?
Whenever possible, the patient decides. Adults who can understand their condition and communicate their wishes have the right to choose full code, DNR, or other care preferences. Clinicians should provide honest information about the likely benefits, burdens, and outcomes of resuscitation.
If the patient cannot make decisions, a legally authorized surrogate may decide. This might be a healthcare power of attorney, spouse, adult child, parent, or another person designated by state or local law. The surrogate’s role is not simply to choose what they personally want, but to represent what the patient would have wanted based on known values, beliefs, and prior statements.
Documents such as advance directives, living wills, and POLST or MOLST forms can help guide these decisions. The names and legal details vary by location, but the goal is similar: to make a person’s medical wishes clear before an emergency occurs.
Why Full Code May Be Right for Some Patients
Full code status can be entirely appropriate. For a healthy person undergoing a low-risk procedure, a patient with a treatable heart rhythm problem, or someone who wants all reasonable attempts at survival, full code may match their goals. Some people value even a small chance of survival enough to accept the burdens of resuscitation.
For others, the possibility of surviving with severe brain injury, dependence on machines, or loss of independence may feel worse than death. Neither view is “wrong.” Code status is deeply personal, and the best decision is one that aligns medical reality with the patient’s definition of an acceptable life.
Questions to Ask Your Healthcare Team
If you or a loved one is asked about code status, consider asking:
- What is the chance CPR would work in this specific situation?
- If resuscitation works, what kind of recovery is likely?
- Would the patient likely need a ventilator or ICU care afterward?
- What complications are common for someone with this condition?
- Can we document preferences in an advance directive?
These questions can transform a stressful decision into a thoughtful conversation. They also remind everyone involved that code status is not just a medical checkbox; it is a reflection of values, hopes, fears, and realistic expectations.
The Bottom Line
Full code status means a patient wants the medical team to attempt resuscitation if their heart or breathing stops. It can involve CPR, shocks, breathing tubes, medications, and intensive care. While these interventions can save lives, they can also be physically traumatic and may not lead to the outcome a patient imagines.
The most important step is to talk about code status before an emergency. Patients, families, and clinicians should discuss not only whether to attempt resuscitation, but also what quality of life and recovery would be acceptable. When those wishes are understood and documented, healthcare decisions become less about panic in a crisis and more about honoring the person at the center of the care.

