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Advance Care Planning -
The Time is Now
Day November 24, 2006
Family and physician concerns about legal
rights and potential liabilities cause many patients who are
incapacitated by illness or injuries to receive undesired
treatment or have treatment withheld or withdrawn.
Respirators, feeding tubes, and other measures are often
used because there is no clear directive as to what the
patient wants. Proper advance planning can ensure that a
patient’s wishes are known and implemented. Health care
proxies and advance directives (such as living wills) give
patients who have become incapacitated control over their
treatment. Health care proxies are legal documents,
recognized in all 50 states, through which an agent or
surrogate acts on behalf of the incapacitated patient to
make treatment decisions. A living will also sets forth the
patient’s wishes regarding end-of-life decisions, but many
states do not recognize them as binding in the absence of a
health care agent. To implement a living will, the patient
needs to designate in writing an individual (and usually an
alternate) to act on his or her behalf. (Living wills are
not enforceable in Massachusetts.)
To ensure that your treatment wishes are followed in the
event of incapacity, you should follow these steps to create
a health care proxy:
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Identify a health care agent, and
preferably an alternate agent as well. Select someone you
trust who is willing and able to make crucial and often
difficult decisions on your behalf.
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Determine your instructions. Examine
treatment alternatives and discuss them with your physician,
attorney, and family members. Put your wishes in writing.
Make sure your agent fully understands your instructions and
is prepared to carry them out.
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Draft your health care proxy.
Consider a consultation with your physician or attorney.
Sample forms are available through lawyers, many hospitals,
and websites devoted to legal and health care matters. A
commonly used form is available at www.massmed.org/ma_proxy.
The proxy must identify you and your agent and include
contact information. It should also state that your agent
has authority to make health care decisions on your behalf
and what limitations, if any, are imposed on the agent’s
authority. Clearly state that the agent’s authority begins
only if you are unable to make health care decisions.
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Have your health care proxy witnessed.
Sign your health care proxy and have it witnessed by two
individuals who are not your agents, caregivers, or
relatives.
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Make sure your health care proxy is
accessible. All too often, treating physicians don’t
know whether their patients have health care agents, so give
copies of your health care proxy to your physician and
designated agent(s). Your spouse, partner, or family should
also have a copy.
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Review your health care proxy regularly.
Update your document as needed to reflect changes in your
situation, including changes in your agent’s contact
information or your treatment instructions. Review your
health care proxy in connection with a regularly scheduled
event such as an annual consultation with your physician.
Without a properly appointed health care
agent, your spouse, partner, or other loved ones may not be
able to participate in medical treatment decisions, leaving
health care decisions up to people who don’t know your
wishes. These simple steps will help ensure that you receive
only the treatment you want.
David Stern is a graduate of Harvard
College and Harvard Law School and the founder of
online-registries, Inc. (OLR), a family of Web-based
companies that provides digital storage of vital personal
medical information, combined with the ability to access and
share that information with designated healthcare providers
in an emergency. med proxy is OLR's Internet registry for
information about whom to contact regarding your healthcare
treatment if you should be unable to make those decisions
for yourself. For more information, visit
http://www.online-registries.com or
call (401) 841-5600. |