Patient Information
Advance Health Care Directive
Introduction
to
Advance Health Care Directives (AHCD)
California law gives you the ability to insure that your health care wishes are
known and considered if you become unable to make these decisions yourself.
The following are answers to commonly
asked questions about Advance Directives:
What is an Advance Health Care Directive?
An Advance Health Care Directive (AHCD) is the best way to make sure that your health
care wishes are known and considered if for any reason you are unable to speak for
yourself. Completing a form called an “Advance Health Care Directive” allows you,
under California law, to do either or both of two things:
First, you may appoint another person
to be your health care “agent.” This person (who may also be know as your “attorney-in-fact”)
will have legal authority to make decisions about your medical care if you become
unable to make these decisions for yourself.
Second, you may write down your health
care wishes in the AHCD form – for example, a desire not to receive treatment that
only prolongs the dying process if you are terminally ill. Your doctor and your
agent must follow your lawful instructions.
Is an Advance
Health Care Directive different from a “living will”?
The AHCD is now the legally recognized format for a living will in California. It
replaces the Natural Death Act Declaration. The AHCD allows you to do more than
the traditional living will, which only states your desire not to receive life-sustaining
treatment if you are terminally ill or permanently unconscious. An AHCD allows you
to state your wishes about refusing or accepting life-sustaining treatment in any
situation.
Unlike a living will, an AHCD also
can be used to state your desire about health care in any situation in which you
are unable to make your own decisions, not just when you are in a coma or are terminally
ill. In addition, an AHCD allows you to appoint someone you trust to speak for you
when you are incapacitated.
You do not need a separate living
will if you have already stated your wishes about life-sustaining treatment in an
AHCD.
Is an Advance
Health Care Directive different from a “Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care”?
The AHCD has replaced the Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care as the legally recognized document for appointing a health
care agent in California. The AHCD allows you to do more than a Durable Power of
Attorney for Health Care. An AHCD permits you not only to appoint an agent, but
to give instructions about your own health care. You can now do either or both of
these things.
What if I
have already executed a Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care or a Natural Death
Act Declaration. Is it still valid? Do I have to complete a new Advance Health Care
Directive?
All valid Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care and Natural
Death Act Declarations remain valid. Thus, unless your existing Durable Power of
Attorney for Health Care has expired, you do not have to complete a new AHCD. A
Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care executed before 1992 has expired and should
be replaced. Because the new AHCD gives you more flexibility to state your health
care desires, you may wish to complete the new form even if you previously completed
a Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care or Natural Death Act Declaration. At
a minimum, you should review your existing Durable Power of Attorney for Health
Care or Natural Death Act Declaration to make sure it has not expired and that it
still accurately reflects your wishes.
Who
can complete an Advance Health Care Directive?
Any California resident who is at least eighteen (18) years old (or is an emancipated
minor), of sound mind, and acting of his or her own free will can complete a valid
AHCD.
Do
I need a lawyer to complete an Advance Health Care Directive?
No. You do not need a lawyer to assist you in completing an AHCD form. The only
exception applies to individuals who have been involuntarily committed to a mental
health facility who wish to appoint their conservator as their agent.
Who
may I appoint as my health care agent?
You can appoint almost any adult to be your agent. You can choose a member of your
family, such as your spouse or an adult child, a friend, or someone else you trust.
You can also appoint one or more “alternate agents” in case the person you select
as your health care agent is unavailable or unwilling to make a decision. (If you
appoint your spouse and later get divorced, the AHCD remains valid, but your first
alternate agent will become your agent.)
It is important that you talk to
the people you plan to appoint to make sure they understand your wishes and agree
to accept this responsibility. Your health care agent will be immune from liability
so long as he or she acts in good faith.
The law prohibits you from choosing
certain people to act as your agent(s). You may not choose your doctor, or a person
who operates a community care facility (sometimes called a “board and care home”)
or a residential care facility in which you receive care. The law also prohibits
you from appointing a person who works for the health facility in which you are
being treated, or the community care or residential care facility in which you receive
care, unless that person is related to you by blood, marriage, or adoption, or is
a co-worker.
Can
I appoint more than one person to share the responsibility of being my health care
agent?
It is recommended that you name only one person as your health care agent. If two
or more people are given equal authority and they disagree about a health care decision,
one of the important purposes of the AHCD – to identify clearly who has authority
to speak for you – will be defeated. If you are afraid of offending people close
to you by choosing one over another to be your agent, ask them to decide among themselves
who will be the agent, and list the others as alternate agents.
I want
to provide more specific health care instructions than those included on this form.
How do I do that?
You may write detailed instructions for your health care agent and physician(s).
To do so, simply attach one or more sheets of paper to the form, write your instructions,
write the number of pages you are attaching, and sign and date the attachments at
the same time you have the form witnessed or notarized. More specific instructions
are available at the California Medical Association’s website at www.cmanet.org.
How
much authority will my health care agent have?
If you become unable to make your own health care decisions, your agent will have
legal authority to speak for you in health care matters. Physicians and other health
care professionals will look to your agent for decisions rather than to your next
of kin or any other person. Your agent will be able to accept or refuse medical
treatment, have access to your medical records, and make decisions about donating
your organs, authorizing an autopsy, and disposing of your body should you die.
If you do not want your agent to
have certain of these powers or to make a certain decision, you can write a statement
in the AHCD form limiting your agent’s authority. In addition, the law says that
your agent cannot authorize convulsive treatment (i.e., electroconvulsive therapy
or ECT), psychosurgery, sterilization, abortion, or placement in a mental health
treatment facility.
The person you appoint as your agent
has no authority to make decisions for you until you are unable to make those decisions
yourself, unless you choose to allow your agent to make those decisions for you
immediately.
When you become incapacitated, your
agent must make decisions that are consistent with any instructions you have written
in the AHCD form or made known in other ways, such as by telling family members,
friends or your doctor. If you have not made your wishes known, your agent must
decide what is in your best interests, considering your personal values to the extent
they are known.
What
should I tell my family, my health care agent, and my doctors?
One of the most important parts of completing an AHCD is the conversations you have
about it with your loved ones and your physicians. You should talk about: your personal
values and what makes living meaningful to you: your current medical condition and
decisions you may foresee in the future: specific concerns or wishes you may have
regarding life support or aggressive interventions, hospice or long-term care; what
concerns you most about death or dying; and how you would want to spend the last
month of your life. It is recommended, although not always possible, that such a
discussion include both your physician(s), and your health care agent (and alternate
agent(s)).
Tell your loved ones that you have
completed an AHCD and what you have said in it, especially if you have selected
a health care agent. Your AHCD will likely go into effect during a period of crisis,
for them. It can help ease their burden to know that you have made some of these
decisions in advance. In addition, they should know in advance who is to speak for
you in making medical decisions and where copies of your AHCD can be found. Remind
them that their role is to make sure that your wishes are communicated and that
those wishes guide their decision making.
Will
my health care agent be responsible for my medical bills?
No, not unless that person would otherwise be responsible for your debts. The AHCD
deals only with medical decisions making and has no effect on financial responsibility
for your health care. Please note, however, that unless you have made other arrangements,
your agent may be responsible for costs related to the disposition of your body
after you die. Consult an attorney regarding how your financial affairs should best
be handled.
For
how long is an Advance Health Care Directive valid?
An AHCD is valid forever, unless you revoke it or state in the form a specific date
on which you want it to expire.
What
should I do with the Advance Health Care Directive form after I fill it out?
Make sure that the form has been properly signed, dated, and either notarized or
witnessed by two qualified individuals (the form includes instructions about who
can and cannot be a witness). Keep the original in a safe place where your loved
ones can find it quickly. Give copies of the completed form to the people you have
appointed as your agent and alternate agent(s), to your doctor(s) and health plan,
and to family members or anyone else who is likely to be called if there is a medical
emergency. You should tell these people to present a copy of the form at the request
of your health care providers or emergency medical personnel.
Take a copy of the form with you
if you are going to be admitted to a hospital, nursing home or other health care
facility. Copies of the completed form can be relied upon by your agent and doctors
as though they were the original.
What
if I change my mind after completing an Advance Health Care Directive?
You can revoke or change an AHCD at any time. To revoke the entire form, including
the appointment of your agent, you must inform your treating health care provider
personally or in writing. Completing a new AHCD will revoke all previous directives.
In addition, if you revoke or change your directive, you should notify every person
or facility that has a copy of your prior directive and provide them with a new
one.
You should complete a new form if
you want to name a different person as your agent or make other changes. However,
if you need only to update the address or telephone numbers of your agent, or alternate
agent(s), you may write in the new information and initial and date the change.
Of course, you should make copies or otherwise ensure that those who need this new
contact information will have it. You should make a list of the people and institutions
to whom you give a copy of the form so you will know whom to contact if you revoke
the AHCD, update contact information, or make a new one.
I have
reached a point in my life that I don’t want the paramedics to give me CPR. Will
this Advance Health Care Directive keep this from happening?
If the paramedics see your AHCD before they start resuscitative efforts, and the
AHCD clearly instructs them not to start these efforts, they probably will not start
resuscitation. The best approach is to complete the “Prehospital Do Not Resuscitate
(DNR)” form and obtain a “Do Not Resuscitate- EMS” medallion approved by California’s
Emergency Medical Services Authority. You may order copies of the DNR form (which
includes instructions on ordering the medallion) from CMA publications. See www.cmanet.org for more information.
Is
my Advance Health Care Directive valid in other states? An AHCD
that meets the requirements of California law may or may not be honored in other
states, but most states will recognize an AHCD that is executed legally in another
state. If you spend a lot of time in another state, you may want to consult a doctor,
lawyer, or the medical society in that state to find out about the laws there.
Can
anyone force me to sign an Advance Health Care Directive? No. The
law specifically says that no one can require you to complete an Advance Health
Care Directive before admitting you to a hospital or other health care facility,
and no one can deny you health insurance because you choose not to complete an AHCD.
Where
can I get more information about the Advance Health Care Directive? Your doctor probably can provide you
with more information. However, you should talk to a lawyer if you want legal advice.
For more information about end-of-life
medical decisions, go to
www.finalchoices.calhealth.org, the website for the California Coalition
for Compassionate Care.
The booklet “Finding Your Way” is
a useful guide to thinking about and discussing these issues. To get a copy, contact
Sacramento Healthcare Decisions, 3400 Data Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 or (916)
851-2828.
Where
can I get an AHCD form?
A free Advance Health Care Directive form can be obtained from the
Riverside Medical Clinic Library, located at 7117 Brockton Ave., Riverside,
CA 92506. Also, you may download form here.*
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