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Information about Advanced Medical Directives |
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What is an advanced
medical directive?
What is a health care
power-of-attorney?
How do I
create a health care power-of- attorney
How do I choose
someone to be my agent
What are the benefits of having a health care power-of-attorney
What is a living will
What are the differences between a living will and a health care power
of-attorney
How do I create a living will
What are the
benefits of having a living will
Once I have created my advance directives, what should I do with them
I made an advance directive when I lived in another state. Do I need to
do it again now that I live in Virginia
What if I change my mind
What if I have made an advance directive, but I am in pain
Can an advance directive be used to encourage “mercy killing” or
euthanasia
Will having an advance directive affect my insurance benefits
How will health care decisions be made if I choose not to prepare an
advance directive now and I become unable to decide for myself
What is a Durable
Do Not Resuscitate Order
What should I
do if I want to donate my organs
What is an advanced
medical directive? An advance directive is a written or oral
statement made by you, while you are competent, that expresses your
wishes should you become incapable of making an informed health care
decision due to a mental or physical disorder. The two types of advance
directives most often used are the health care power-of-attorney and a
living will. You may choose to use either or both of these tools, or you
may choose not to make an advance medical directive at all.
Go Back.
What is a health care
power-of-attorney? A health care power-of-attorney (sometimes
called a medical power-of attorney) is a document in which you (the
“principal”) give legal authority to another person (the “agent”) to
make some or all of your health care decisions for you in the event you
become incapable of making those decisions for yourself. Thus, while you
are competent, choices about health care remain up to you; your
designated agent uses a health care power-of-attorney only when you
become incapable of making your own decisions about health care and
medical treatment. You can be very specific in your power-of-attorney
document. In your health care power of-attorney, you can limit the
agent’s power to make decisions. You can include guidelines in your
power-of-attorney, outlining what types of decisions your agent is
authorized to make, such as consenting to, refusing or withdrawing
treatment, choice of health care provider, or decisions regarding organ
donation. You can change or end the power of your agent at any time, so
long as you are still legally capable of making your own decisions. In
other words, you can design a health care power of-attorney to address
your beliefs, and concerns, and preferences—there is no prescribed level
of authority that you must grant your agent.
Go Back.
How do I
create a health care power-of- attorney? A health care
power-of-attorney is generally created by a written document, setting
out the powers of your agent. You must sign the document in the presence
of two witnesses who are not your spouse or blood relatives. You do not
need to have the document notarized. If your doctor has diagnosed you
with a terminal condition, and you are still competent, you may create a
health care power-of-attorney orally. This must be done in the presence
of your attending doctor and two witnesses.
Go Back.
How do I choose someone
to be my agent? Deciding who will serve as your agent is very
important. It should be an adult whom you trust completely and who knows
your values, religious beliefs, and any other important concerns you
have. Many people choose a spouse or an adult child. Be confident that
the person you select will be able to think clearly on your behalf
despite his or her personal feelings about the situation. It is a good
idea to select a secondary agent to make decisions in the event your
primary agent is unable or unwilling to do so. It is also a good idea to
discuss your desire to designate a person as your agent with that person
to ascertain if he or she is willing to accept this responsibility and
to discuss the extent of the authority you intend to confer. Remember,
you can change or terminate your agent at any time, so long as you are
still legally competent. Go
Back.
What are the benefits of having a health care power-of-attorney?
Times of medical need are inherently stressful. Preparing a health care
power-of-attorney in advance reduces the chance of conflict among your
family, friends and health care providers. If your wishes are clear,
there is less chance of the courts or the government becoming involved
in your private matters. In short, a health care power-of-attorney
enables you to specify who will make decisions about your care and
treatment pursuant to whatever guidelines you choose to specify.
Go Back.
What is a living will? A
living will (also known as a health care declaration) is generally a
written document that authorizes the providing, withholding or
withdrawal of life-prolonging procedures in the event you have a
terminal condition. A terminal condition may mean either that your death
is imminent, or that you are in a persistent vegetative state. In your
living will, you can direct that specific procedures or treatments, such
as artificially administered nutrition, be either provided or withheld.
Some people want the determination that they have a terminal condition
to be made by their attending doctor and one additional physician. Some
people also wish for the condition to have lasted for a specified time
period before treatment is withheld or withdrawn. You should be sure
that your living will accurately reflects your wishes. Again, a living
will can be written to reflect your preferences and directions; there is
nothing to prescribe what you must or must not include in a living
will. Go Back.
What are the differences between a living will and a health care power
of-attorney? A living will is different from a health care
power-of-attorney in that a living will does not appoint an agent. A
living will also applies only to cases of terminal illness, whereas a
power-of-attorney may apply any time you are unable to make an informed
decision about your medical care.
Go Back.
How do I create a living will?
A living will is usually prepared in writing. The law requires that you
sign your living will in the presence of two witnesses who are not your
spouse or blood relatives. If your doctor has diagnosed you with a
terminal condition, yet you are still legally competent, you may make an
oral advance directive, authorizing the providing, withholding or
withdrawing of life-prolonging procedures. This oral statement must be
made in the presence of your attending doctor and two witnesses.
Go Back.
What are the
benefits of having a living will? Like completing a health care
power-of-attorney, preparing a living will can help ease the confusion
and conflict that may arise among your loved ones if you become
terminally ill. It can also help assure that the power to make these
important decisions is yours, and not the Commonwealth’s, as a living
will serves as the final expression of your legal right to refuse or to
authorize medical or surgical treatment.
Go Back.
Once I have created my advance directives, what should I do with them?
Because they cover different circumstances above, many people choose to
execute both a health care power-of-attorney and a living will. Either
one of these, or both together, are termed “advance directives.” It is
your responsibility to make sure that your health care providers know
that you have made an advance directive. If you are unable to do so,
however, someone else may tell your doctor that you have prepared an
advance directive. Be sure your family knows as well. You should sign
multiple originals of your advance directives and give them to all the
people who may need them. For example, you should consider giving copies
to your doctor or other health care professionals, family members,
hospitals or hospices, and your clergy. You may also give a signed
original to your lawyer to hold in his or her files. Also, be sure to
keep a signed original at home with your other important papers. Talk to
your doctor to be sure he or she understands your choices and will
respect your decision. Your advance directives should be made a part of
your medical record. Go Back.
I made an advance directive when I lived in another state. Do I need to
do it again now that I live in Virginia?
If you made an advance directive in another state, it will be valid in
Virginia provided it was executed according to the laws of the
Commonwealth of Virginia or the state where it was made.
Go Back.
What if I change my mind?
You may cancel your advance directives (health care power-of-attorney or
living will) at any time, as long as you are still legally competent.
You may do this by a signed, dated writing, by physically destroying the
advance directive yourself, or by having someone else destroy it in your
presence, or by expressing orally your intent to cancel the advance
directive. It is also advisable to destroy any copies to avoid future
confusion or dispute. Remember, it is important that your attending
doctor be told immediately if you change your mind. Likewise, you should
inform family members and other persons who are aware that you
previously made an advance directive.
Go Back.
What if I have made an advance directive, but I am in pain? It
is important to understand that just because you prepare an advance
directive does not mean that you will be unable to receive pain
medication. A living will pertains to treatments that artificially
extend your life, not to procedures or medicines needed to provide you
with comfort or alleviate pain. A health care power-of-attorney gives
your agent the power to make decisions based on your stated preferences
or your best interests. Often, this includes the provision of
pain-relieving medications.
Go Back.
Can an advance directive be used to encourage “mercy killing” or
euthanasia? Sometimes people are afraid that if they become
terminally ill or unable to make their own decisions, they will be a
burden on their loved ones. Many feel that they would rather hasten
their own death to avoid this possibility of prolonged stress on others,
or to put an end to a painful illness. The law on advance directives,
however, may not be interpreted to authorize or approve of mercy killing
or euthanasia, or to allow any act or omission to end life, other than
to permit the natural process of dying.
Go Back.
Will having an advance directive affect my insurance benefits?
Under the law of the Commonwealth of Virginia, your decision to make an
advance directive may not affect whether you are able to obtain a life
insurance policy or be used as a reason for your insurance company to
modify the terms of your existing policy. If you or your health care
power of-attorney agent choose to have your life-prolonging procedures
withheld or withdrawn, this does not constitute a suicide, and it will
not affect your insurance benefits. In addition, no one may require you
to make an advance directive or consent to a Durable Do Not Resuscitate
Order as a condition of being insured for, or receiving, health care
services. Go Back.
How will health care decisions be made if I choose not to prepare an
advance directive now and I become unable to decide for myself?
If you choose not to make an advance directive, this does not mean that
you are automatically consenting to or refusing life-prolonging
procedures. If you are incapable of making an informed decision about
your health care and you have not made an advance directive, or if your
advance directive does not address the current situation and you have
not appointed an agent, the law specifies who your doctor should turn to
for medical decisions. The following persons, in the specified order,
will be asked to make your treatment decisions: a guardian (if you have
one), your spouse, your adult child, your parent, your adult brother or
sister, or any other relative. They must take into account any
preferences you have expressed, your religious beliefs and values, and
your best interests. If another person does not agree with the medical
decision, he or she may ask the court where you reside to review the
situation. If you wish to avoid disputes or confusion about your care
and treatment, it is better to make an advance directive.
Go Back.
What is a
Durable Do Not Resuscitate Order? A Durable Do Not Resuscitate
Order is not the same thing as an advance directive. It is a written
order made by a doctor to withhold cardiopulmonary resuscitation. This
means that medical personnel will not act if there is respiratory or
cardiac arrest. A doctor may issue the order only with the consent of
the patient or the patient’s legal representative. The order remains
valid and in effect until it is revoked by the patient or the
representative. Go Back.
What should
I do if I want to donate my organs? If you want to donate your
organs upon your death, there are several ways you can make this desire
known. You may specify on your driver’s license that you wish to be an
organ donor. You also can indicate your desire to donate your organs in
any signed written document, including your advance directive or your
will. If you are unable to sign the document yourself, you can have
another person sign it for you in your presence and the presence of two
witnesses, who must also sign. If you wish, you may appoint an agent in
your will or your advance directive to make a gift of your organs upon
your death. In all cases, be sure to let your family know your decision
regarding organ donation. Doing so can save valuable time in getting
your organs to those in need if you have decided to make an anatomical
gift. Go Back.
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