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Living Will and Health
Care Proxies
Just as we create estate plans for our eventual demise, we also
need to plan ahead for the possibility that we will become sick and
unable to make our own medical decisions. Medical science has
created many miracles, among them the technology to keep patients
alive longer, sometimes indefinitely. As a result of many
well-publicized "right to die" cases, states have made it possible
for individuals to give detailed instructions regarding the kind of
care they would like to receive should they become terminally ill or
are in a permanently unconscious state. These instructions fall
under the general category of "health care decisionmaking."
Depending on the state in which you live, this may take the form of
a health care proxy, a medical directive, or a living will.
The Health Care
Proxy
If an individual becomes incapacitated, it is important that
someone have the legal authority to communicate that person's wishes
concerning medical treatment. Similar to a power of attorney, a
health care proxy allows an individual to appoint someone else to
act as their agent, but for medical, as opposed to financial,
decisions. The health care proxy is a document executed by a
competent person (the principal) giving another person (the agent)
the authority to make health care decisions for the principal if he
or she is unable to communicate such decisions. By executing a
health care proxy, principals ensure that the instructions that they
have given their agent will be carried out. A health care proxy is
especially important to have if an individual and family members may
disagree about treatment.
In general, a health care proxy takes effect only when the
principal requires medical treatment and a physician determines that
the principal is unable to communicate his or her wishes concerning
treatment. How this works exactly can depend on the laws of the
particular state and the terms of the health care proxy itself. If
the principal later becomes able to express his or her own wishes,
he or she will be listened to and the health care proxy will have no
effect.
Since the agent will have the authority to make medical decisions
in the event the principal is unable to make such decisions for him-
or herself, the agent should be a family member or friend that the
principal trusts to follow his or her instructions. Before executing
a health care proxy, the principal should talk to the person whom he
or she wants to name as the agent about the principal's wishes
concerning medical decisions, especially life-sustaining
treatment.
Once the health care proxy is drawn up, the agent should keep the
original document. The principal should have a copy and the
principal's physician should keep a copy with that individual's
medical records.
Those interested in drawing up a health care proxy document
should contact an attorney who is skilled and experienced in elder
law matters. Many hospitals and nursing homes also provide forms, as
do some public agencies.
Medical
Directives
Accompanying a health care proxy should be a medical directive.
Such directives provide the agent with instructions on what type of
care the principal would like. A medical directive can be included
in the health care proxy or it can be a separate document. It may
contain directions to refuse or remove life support in the event the
principal is in a coma or a vegetative state, or it may provide
instructions to use all efforts to keep the principal alive, no
matter what the circumstances. Medical directives can also be
broader statements granting general authority for all medical
decisions that are important to the principal. These broader medical
directives give the agent guidance in less serious situations.
Living
Wills
Living wills are documents that give instructions regarding
treatment if the individual becomes terminally ill or is in a
persistent vegetative state and is unable to communicate his or her
own instructions. The living will states under what conditions
life-sustaining treatment should be terminated. If an individual
would like to avoid life-sustaining treatment when it would be
hopeless, he or she needs to draw up a living will. Like a health
care proxy, a living will takes effect only upon a person's
incapacity. Also, a living will is not set in stone; an individual
can always revoke it at a later date if he or she wishes to do
so.
Although a living will is not legally acknowleged in
Massachusetts, it does offer the agent of your health care proxy
some additional guidance and reassurance regarding your wished for
life support procedures.
William F.
Smith Attorney at Law West Boylston, MA
508-835-2100 Moultonboro NH 603-253-2906
wsmith@mass-elderlaw.com
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