Gay and Lesbians - Living Will
In the absence of a Living Will or other legal
arrangement if you become disabled, your partner generally has no say regarding
medical care or life support. Your partner cannot access your assets. Your
partner cannot receive information on your medical status or medical care.
Advance directives are very personal documents and you should feel free to
develop one which best suits your own needs. All States have declared that
competent adults have the fundamental right in collaboration with their health
care providers, to control decisions about their own health care. States
recognize in their law and public policy, the personal right of the individual
patient to make voluntary, informed choices to accept, to reject or to choose
among alternative courses of medical and surgical treatment. If you have a
Living Will, you can designate your partner as a decision maker.
WHY LIVING WILLS Modern advances in science and
medicine have made possible the prolongation of the lives of many seriously ill
individuals, without always offering realistic prospects for improvement or
cure. For some individuals the possibility of extended life is experienced as
meaningful and of benefit. For others, artificial prolongation of life may seem
to provide nothing medically necessary or beneficial, serving only to extend
suffering and prolong the dying process. States recognize the inherent dignity
and value of human life and within this context recognize the fundamental right
of individuals to make health care decisions to have life-prolonging medical or
surgical means or procedures provided, withheld, or withdrawn. States recognize
the right of competent adults to plan ahead for health care decisions through
the execution of advance directives, such as Living Wills and durable powers of
attorney, and to have their wishes respected, subject to certain limitations.
PURPOSE OF LIVING WILLS In order to assure respect
for patients previously expressed wishes when the capacity to participate
actively in decision making has been lost or impaired; to facilitate and
encourage a sound decision making process in which patients, health care
representatives, families, physicians, and other health care professionals are
active participants; to properly consider patients interests both in
self-determination and in well-being; and to provide necessary and appropriate
safeguards concerning the termination of life-sustaining treatment for
incompetent patients as the law and public policy of this State, the
Legislatures have enacted Living Will/ Advance Directives for Health Care Acts.
REQUIREMENTS OF STATUTE The advance directive for
health care (Living Will) requires a writing executed in accordance with the
requirements of the state law. It must be either signed and dated in front of
an attorney at law or other person authorized to administer oaths, or in the
presence of two subscribing adult witnesses. If the two adult witnesses are
used, they both must attest that the declarant is of sound mind and not under
undue influence. A designated health care representative shall not act as a
witness to the execution of the advance directive. Since this is a legal
document, it must be executed properly to be valid under the statute.
HEALTH CARE REPRESENTATIVE The declarant must
designate one or more alternative health care representatives. Health care
representative means the person designated by you under the Living Will for the
purpose of making health care decisions on your behalf.
WHEN DOES THE ADVANCE DIRECTIVE BECOME OPERATIVE An
advance directive becomes operative when (1) it is transmitted to the attending
physician or to the health care institution, and (2) it is determined pursuant
to the Act that the patient lacks capacity to make a particular health care
decision. Treatment decisions pursuant to an advance directive shall not be
made and implemented until there has been a reasonable opportunity to establish
and where appropriate confirm, a reliable diagnosis for the patient which shall
include the attending physicians opinion concerning the nature, cause, extent,
and probable duration of the patients incapacity, and shall be made a part of
the patients medical records. For additional information or to have a Living
Will prepared, see your attorney. In addition, be certain your Last Will and testament
is up to date.
As Americans, we take it for granted that we are
entitled to make decisions about our own health care. Most of the time we make
these decisions after talking with our own physician about the advantages and
disadvantages of various treatment options. The right of a competent individual
to accept or refuse medical treatment is a fundamental right now fully
protected by law.
But what happens if serious illness, injury or
permanent loss of mental capacity makes us incapable of talking to a doctor and
deciding what medical treatments we do or do not want? These situations pose
difficult questions to all of us as patients, family members, friends and
health care professionals. Who makes these decisions if we cant make them for
ourselves? If we cant make our preferences known how can we make sure that our
wishes will be respected? If disagreements arise among those caring for us
about different treatment alternatives how will they be resolved? Is there a
way to alleviate the burdens shouldered by family members and loved ones when
critical medical decisions must be made?
Living Will: By using documents known as advance
directives for health care, you can answer some of these questions and give
yourself the security of knowing that you can continue to have a say in your
own treatment. A properly prepared Living Will permits you to plan ahead so you
can both make your wishes known, and select someone who will see to it that
your wishes are followed.
After all, if you are seriously ill or injured and
cant make decisions for yourself someone will have to decide about your medical
care. Doesnt it make sense to
? Have your partner or another person you trust
make decisions for you,
? Provide instructions about the treatment you do
and do not want, or
? Both appoint a person to make decisions and
provide them with instructions.
A Few Definitions
Throughout this booklet there are four phrases.
Each of these phrases has a special meaning when it comes to allowing you to
make decisions about your future health care.
Advance directive- If you want your wishes to guide
those responsible for your care you have to plan for what you want in advance.
Generally such planning is more likely to be effective if its done in writing.
So, by an advance directive we mean any written directions you prepare in
advance to say what kind of medical care you want in the event you become
unable to make decisions for yourself.
1. Proxy directives - One way to have a say in your
future medical care is to designate a person (a proxy) you trust and give that
person the legal authority to decide for you if you are unable to make
decisions for yourself. Your chosen proxy (known as a health care
representative) serves as your substitute, standing in for you in discussions
with your physician and others responsible for your care. So, by a proxy
directive we mean written directions that name a proxy to act for you. Another
term some people use for a proxy directive is a durable power of attorney for
health care.²
2. Instruction directives - Another way to have a
say in your future medical care is to provide those responsible for your care
with a statement of your medical treatment preferences. By instruction
directive we mean written directions that spell out in advance what medical
treatments you wish to accept or refuse and the circumstances in which you want
your wishes implemented. These instructions then serve as a guide to those
responsible for your care. Another term some people use for an instruction
directive is a living will.²
3. Combined directives - A third way combines
features of both the proxy and the instruction directive. You may prefer to
give both written instructions, and to designate a health care representative
or proxy to see that your instructions are carried out.
Questions and Answers
1. Why should I consider writing an advance
directive/ living will?
Serious injury, illness or mental incapacity may
make it impossible for you to make health care decisions for yourself. In these
situations, those responsible for your care will have to make decisions for
you. Advance directives are legal documents which provide information about
your treatment preferences to those caring for you, helping to insure that your
wishes are respected even when you cant make decisions yourself. A clearly
written and legally prepared directive helps prevent disagreements among those
close to you and alleviates some of the burdens of decision making which are
often experienced by your partner, family members, friends and health care
providers.
2. When does my advance directive take effect?
Your directive takes effect when you no longer have
the ability to make decisions about your health care. This judgment is normally
made by your attending physician, and any additional physicians who may be
required by law to examine you. If there is any doubt about your ability to
make such decisions, your doctor will consult with another doctor with training
and experience in this area Together they will decide if you are unable to make
your own health care decisions.
3. What happens if I regain the ability to make my
own decisions?
If you regain your ability to make decisions, then
you resume making your own decisions directly. Your directive is in effect only
as long as you are unable to make your own decisions.
4. Are there particular treatments I should
specifically mention in my directive?
It is a good idea to indicate your specific
preferences concerning two specific kinds of life sustaining measures:
1. Artificially provided fluids and nutrition; and
2. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Stating your preferences clearly concerning these
two treatments will be of considerable help in avoiding uncertainty,
disagreements or confusion about your wishes. The enclosed forms provide a
space for you to state specific directions concerning your wishes with respect
to these two forms of treatment.
Fluids and Nutrition. I request that artificially
provided fluids and nutrition, such as by feeding tube or intravenous infusion
(initial one)
1. ______ shall be withheld or withdrawn as Life
Sustaining Treatment.
2. ______ shall be provided to the extent medically
appropriate even if other Life Sustaining Treatment is withheld or withdrawn.
Directive as to Medical Treatment. I request that
Life Sustaining Treatment be withheld or withdrawn from me in each of the
following circumstances: (Initial all that apply)
1. ______ If the life sustaining treatment is
experimental and not a proven therapy, or is likely to be ineffective or futile
in prolonging my life, or is likely to merely prolong an imminent dying
process; 2. ______ If I am permanently unconscious (total and irreversible loss
of consciousness and capacity for interaction with the environment); 3. ______
If I am in a terminal condition (terminal stage of an irreversibly fatal
illness, disease, or condition); or 4. ______ If I have a serious irreversible
illness or condition, and the likely risks and burdens associated with the
medical intervention to be withheld or withdrawn outweigh the likely benefits
to me from such intervention. 5. ______ None of the above. I direct that all
medically appropriate measures be provided to sustain my life, regardless of my
physical or mental condition.
5. What is the advantage of having a health care
representative, isnt it enough to have an instruction directive?
Your doctor and other health care professionals are
legally obligated to consider your expressed wishes as stated in your
instruction directive or living will.² However, instances may occur in which
medical circumstances arise or treatments are proposed that you may not have
thought about when you wrote your directive. If this happens your health care
representative has the authority to participate in discussions with your health
care providers and to make treatment decisions for you in accordance with what
he or she knows of your wishes. Your health care representative will also be
able to make decisions as your medical condition changes, in accordance with
your wishes and best interests.
6. If I decide to appoint a health care
representative, who should I trust with this task?
The person you choose to be your health care
representative has the legal right to accept or refuse medical treatment
(including life-sustaining measures) on your behalf and to assure that your
wishes concerning your medical treatment are carried out. You should choose
your partner or another person who knows you well, and who is familiar with
your feelings about different types of medical treatment and the conditions under
which you would choose to accept or refuse either a specific treatment or all
treatment.
A health care representative must understand that
his or her responsibility is to implement your wishes even if your
representative or others might disagree with them. So it is important to select
someone in whose judgment you have confidence. People that you might consider
asking to be your health care representative include:
? your partner, a member of your family or a very
close friend.
7. Should I discuss my wishes with my health care
representative and others?
Absolutely! Your health care representative is the
person who speaks for you when you cant speak for yourself. It is very
important that he or she has a clear sense of your feelings, attitudes and
health care preferences. You should also discuss your wishes with your
physician, family members and others who will be involved in caring for you.
8. Does my health care representative have the
authority to make all health care decisions for me?
It is up to you to say what your health care
representative can and cannot decide. You may wish to give him or her broad
authority to make all treatment decisions including decisions to forego
life-sustaining measures. On the other hand, you may wish to restrict the
authority to specific treatments or circumstances. Your representative has to
respect these limitations.
9. Is my doctor obligated to talk to my health care
representative?
Yes. Your health care representative has the legal authority
to make medical decisions on your behalf, in consultation with your doctor.
Your doctor is legally obligated to consult with your chosen representative and
to respect his or her decision as if it were your decision. In the absence of a
Living Will or other written authorization The Federal Health Information
Privacy and Protection Act (HIPAA) prevents a physician from discussing
confidential medical information with your partner.
10. Is my health care representative the only
person who can speak for me, or can other friends or family members participate
in making treatment decisions?
It is generally a good idea for your health care
representative to consult with family members or others in making decisions,
and if you wish you can direct that he or she do so. It should be understood by
everyone, however, that your health care representative is the only person with
the legal authority to make decisions about your health care even if others
disagree.
11. Can I request all measures be taken to sustain my
life?
Yes. You should make this choice clear in your
advance directive. Remember, a directive can be used to request medical
treatments as well as to refuse unwanted ones.
12. Does my doctor have to carry out my wishes as
stated in my instruction directive?
If your treatment preferences are clear your doctor
is legally obligated to implement your wishes. unless doing this would violate
his or her conscience or accepted medical practice. If your doctor is unwilling
to honor your wishes he or she must assist in transferring you to the care of
another doctor.
13. Can I make changes in my directive?
Yes. An advance directive can be updated or
modified in whole or in part, at any time, by a legally competent individual.
You should update your directive whenever you feel it no longer accurately
reflects your wishes. It is a good idea to review your directive on a regular
basis, perhaps every 5 years. Each time you review the directive, indicate the
date on the form itself and have someone witness the changes you make. If you
make a lot of changes, you may want to write a new directive. Remember to
notify all those important to you of any changes you make.
14. Can I revoke my directive at any time?
Yes. You can revoke your directive at any time,
regardless of your physical or mental condition. This can be done in writing,
orally, or by any action which indicates that you no longer want the directive
to be in effect.
15. Who should have copies of my advance directive?
A copy should be given to the person that you have
named as your health care representative, as well as to your family, your
doctor, and others who are important to you. If you enter a hospital, nursing
home, or hospice, a copy of your advance directive should be provided so that
it can be made part of your medical records. The back cover of this brochure
contains a wallet size card you can complete and carry with you to tell others
that you have an advance directive.
16. Can I use my advance directive to make an organ
donation upon my death?
Yes. You may state your wishes regarding organ
donation. Also you may want to place an organ donor card in your wallet to
alert medical personnel. Any card will do. If you decide to make a gift of your
organs upon your death please complete the card and carry it with you at all
times. For further information regarding organ donation you should contact
either an organ procurement agency or your local hospital.
3. Terms You Should Understand
1. Artificially provided fluids and nutrition: The
provision of food and water to seriously ill patients who are unable or
unwilling to eat. Depending on the method used, such as insertion of a feeding
tube or an intravenous line, and the condition of the patient, techniques may
involve minor surgery, continuous supervision by medical (and sometimes
surgical) personnel, risk of injury or infection, and side effects.
2. Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR): A treatment
administered by health care professionals when a persons heartbeat and
breathing stops. CPR may restore functioning if administered properly and in a
timely fashion and may include the use of mechanical devices and/or drugs.
3. Life-sustaining measures: Any medical procedure,
device, artificially provided fluids and nutrition, drugs, surgery, or therapy
that uses mechanical or other artificial means to sustain, restore or supplant
a vital bodily function. thereby prolonging the life of a patient.
4. Decision making capacity: A patients ability to
understand the benefits and risks of a proposed medical treatment and its alternatives
and to reach an informed decision.
5. Health care representative or health care proxy:
In the event an individual loses decision making capacity, a health care
representative or proxy is a person who has been legally designated to make
decisions on his or her behalf. A health care representative is appointed
through the execution of a proxy directive (a durable power of attorney for
health care).
6. Terminal condition : The terminal stage of an
irreversibly fatal illness, disease, or condition. While determination of a
specific life expectancy is not required for a diagnosis of a terminal
condition a prognosis of a life expectancy of one year or less, with or without
the provision of life-sustaining treatment, is generally considered terminal.
7. Permanent unconsciousness: A medical condition
defined as total and irreversible loss of consciousness. The term permanently
unconscious includes the conditions persistent vegetative state and
irreversible coma Patients in this condition cannot interact with their
surroundings or others in any way and do not experience pleasure or pain.
8. Persistent vegetative state: A condition of
permanent unconsciousness in which the patient loses all capacity for
interaction with their environment or other people. It is usually caused by an
injury to the brain. It is normally not regarded as a terminal condition and
with the aid of medical care and artificial fluids and nutrition patients can
survive for many years.
9. Incurable and irreversible chronic diseases:
Disabling diseases such as Alzheimers disease, organic brain syndrome or other
diseases which get progressively worse over time, eventually resulting in
death. Depending on the disease, the patient may also experience partial or
complete loss of physical and mental abilities. Because the rate at which these
diseases advance may be slow, such diseases are not considered terminal in
their early stages.
10. Whole brain death: Death due to total and
irreversible loss of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain
stem. The criteria of whole brain death must be used to accurately determine
death in individuals who have suffered massive or total brain damage but whose
heart and lungs are kept functioning by machines. Brain dead individuals are
not vegetative or in a coma. but are, in fact, dead.
11. Attending physician : The doctor directly
responsible for your medical treatment. He or she may or may not be your
regular family physician. Depending on your health care needs the attending
physician may consult with others in order to diagnose and treat your medical
condition, but he or she remains directly responsible for your care.
About Kenneth Vercammen Kenneth Vercammen is a Litigation Attorney in
Edison, NJ, approximately 17 miles north of Princeton. He often lectures for
the New Jersey State Bar Association on personal injury, criminal / municipal
court law and drunk driving. He has published 125 articles in national and New
Jersey publications on municipal court and litigation topics. He has served as
a Special Acting Prosecutor in seven different cities and towns in New Jersey
and also successfully defended hundreds of individuals facing Municipal Court
and Criminal Court charges. In his private practice, he has devoted a substantial
portion of his professional time to the preparation and trial of litigated
matters. He has appeared in Courts throughout New Jersey several times each
week on many personal injury matters, Municipal Court trials, matrimonial
hearings and contested administrative law hearings. Since 1985, his primary
concentration has been on litigation matters. Mr. Vercammen gained other legal
experiences as the Confidential Law Clerk to the Court of Appeals of Maryland
(Supreme Court), with the Delaware County, PA District Attorney Office handling
Probable Cause Hearings, Middlesex County Probation Dept as a Probation
Officer, and an Executive Assistant to Scranton District Magistrate, Thomas
Hart, in Scranton, PA.
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